Telling a friend may mean telling the enemy
Poster
ca. 1942 (made)
ca. 1942 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This poster, by an unknown artist, depicts the stereotype of the gossiping woman: the sailor tells his girl, who tells her friend, and the information eventually gets passed on to a suspicious character. What is interesting is that although the messengers are women, the source and ultimate recipient of the secret are both men, the women are simply the means by which it is transmitted to the enemy. Each has a different reaction to the news - passivity, surprise or guile - and it is the brunette who takes up the role of femme fatale. As with the more familiar slogan of 'Keep Mum She's not so Dumb', the implication here is that women cannot be trusted to keep secrets, regardless of whether their disclosure is innocent gossip or espionage, so your friend's friend may be your enemy.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | Telling a friend may mean telling the enemy (generic title) |
Materials and techniques | Colour lithograph |
Brief description | "Telling a friend may mean telling the enemy" World War II propaganda poster warning against careless talk, printed for HMSO by J. Weiner Ltd, England (London), about 1941 |
Physical description | "Telling a friend may mean telling the enemy" World War II propaganda poster warning against careless talk. The poster is divided into four parts, and in each are the heads of two people engaged in conversation. The first (upper left) depicts a sailor talking to his girlfriend, who speaks to her friend in the second (upper right), who tells another female friend (lower left), and in the final square, one of the women from the third has passed the information is passed to a shifty-looking man, the implication being that he is a spy. Below the images in each square is part of the slogan, 'Telling' in the first, 'a friend may', in the second, 'mean telling' in the third, and finally, 'the enemy'. |
Dimensions |
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Marks and inscriptions |
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Credit line | Gift of the American Friends of the V&A; Gift to the American Friends by Leslie, Judith and Gabri Schreyer and Alice Schreyer Batko |
Subjects depicted | |
Summary | This poster, by an unknown artist, depicts the stereotype of the gossiping woman: the sailor tells his girl, who tells her friend, and the information eventually gets passed on to a suspicious character. What is interesting is that although the messengers are women, the source and ultimate recipient of the secret are both men, the women are simply the means by which it is transmitted to the enemy. Each has a different reaction to the news - passivity, surprise or guile - and it is the brunette who takes up the role of femme fatale. As with the more familiar slogan of 'Keep Mum She's not so Dumb', the implication here is that women cannot be trusted to keep secrets, regardless of whether their disclosure is innocent gossip or espionage, so your friend's friend may be your enemy. |
Other number | LS.1910 - Leslie Schreyer Loan Number |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.1870-2004 |
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Record created | May 3, 2006 |
Record URL |
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