A polished version of this post was published in Contexts. You can download it here.
Most of our readers are probably familiar with the now-iconic “We Can Do It!” poster associated with Rosie the Riveter and the movement of women into the paid industrial workforce during World War II:
It is, by this point, so recognizable that it is often parodied or appropriated for a variety of uses (including selling household cleaners). The image is widely seen as a symbol of women’s empowerment and a sign of major gender transformations that occurred during the 1940s.
In their article, “Visual Rhetoric Representing Rosie the Riveter: Myth and Misconception in J. Howard Miller’s ‘We Can Do It!’ Poster,” James Kimble and Lester Olson argue that our current interpretations of the poster don’t necessarily align with how it was seen at the time.
While the poster is often described as a government recruiting item (Kimble and Olson give many examples in the article of inaccurate attributions from a variety of sources), it was, in fact, created by J. Howard Miller as part of a series of posters for the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company — the Westinghouse logo is clearly visible just under the woman’s arm, and the badge on her shirt collar is the badge employees wore on the plant floor, including an employee number. The War Production Co-ordinating Committee was an internal Westinghouse committee, similar to those created by many companies during the war, not a government entity.
The assumption of current viewers of the image is usually that it was meant to recruit women into the workforce, or to rally women in general — an early example of girl power marketing, if you will — and was widely displayed. But the audience was actually only Westinghouse employees. The company commissioned artists to create posters to be hung in Westinghouse plants for specific periods of time; this poster specifically says, “Post Feb. 15 to Feb. 28” [1943] in small font on the lower left. There’s no evidence that it was ever made available to the public more broadly. For that matter, the poster doesn’t identify her as “Rosie,” and it’s not clear that at the time she would have been immediately identifiable to viewers as “Rosie the Riveter”.
The image that was more widely seen, and is often conflated with the “We Can Do It!” poster, was Norman Rockwell’s May 29, 1943, cover for the Saturday Evening Post:
Here, the woman is clearly linked to the idea of Rosie the Riveter, through both the name on her lunchbox and the equipment she’s holding. She is more muscular than the woman in Miller’s poster, she’s dirty, and her foot is standing on a copy of Hitler’s Mein Kampf. Rockwell’s image presents the woman as a vital part of the war effort; her work helps defeat the Nazis. The image also includes fewer details to make her look conventionally attractive than Miller’s, where the woman has emphasized eyelashes and visibly painted fingernail.
Most interestingly, Kimble and Olson question the female empowerment message presumed to be the point of the “We Can Do It!” poster. We see the poster on its own, through the lens of a narrative about World War II in which housewives left the kitchen in droves to work in factories. But Westinghouse workers would have seen it in a different context, as one of a series of posters displayed in the plant, with similar imagery and text. When seen as just one in a series, rather than a unique image, Kimble and Olson argue that the collective “we” in “We can do it!” wouldn’t have been women, but Westinghouse employees, who were used to seeing such statements posted in employee-access-only areas of the plant.
Of course, having a woman represent a default factory employee is noteworthy. But our reading of the poster as a feminist emblem partially rests on the idea that this female worker is calling out encouragement to other women. The authors, however, point out a much less empowering interpretation if you think of the poster not in terms of feminism, but in terms of social class and labor relations:
…Westinghouse used “We Can Do It!” and Miller’s other posters to encourage women’s cooperation with the company’s relatively conservative concerns and values at a time when both labor organizing and communism were becoming active controversies for many workers… (p. 537)
…by addressing workers as “we,” the pronoun obfuscated sharp controversies within labor over communism, red-baiting, discrimination, and other heartfelt sources of divisiveness. (p. 550)
One of the major functions of corporate war committees was to manage labor and discourage any type of labor disputes that might disrupt production. From this perspective, images of happy workers expressing support for the war effort and/or workers’ abilities served as propaganda that encouraged workers to identify with one another and management as a team; “patriotism could be invoked to circumvent strikes and characterize workers’ unrest as un-American” (p. 562).
And, as Kimble and Olson illustrate, most of Miller’s posters included no women at all, and when they did, emphasized conventional femininity and the domestic sphere (such as a heavily made-up woman waving to her husband as he left for work).
Of course, today the “We Can Do It!” poster is seen as a feminist icon, adorning coffee cups, t-shirts, calendars, and refrigerator magnets (I have one). Kimble and Olson don’t explain when and how this shift occurred — when the image went from an obscure piece of corporate war-time propaganda, similar to many others, to a widely-recognized pop cultural image of female empowerment. But they make a convincing argument that our current perceptions of the image involve a significant amount of historical myth-making that helps to obscure the discrimination and opposition many women faced in the paid workforce even during the height of the war effort.
[The article appears in Rhetoric & Public Affairs 9(4): 533-570, 2006.]
Gwen Sharp is an associate professor of sociology at Nevada State College. You can follow her on Twitter at @gwensharpnv.
Comments 58
Quercki — January 4, 2011
Here's a link to the song
http://www.archive.org/details/RosieTheRiveter
HP — January 4, 2011
There's an episode of the horror-anthology radio drama The Mysterious Traveler where the narrator drops out of character and addresses the audience with "a special message from the War Department." Basically, they were discouraging women from traveling cross-country to war materiel centers looking for work, and encouraging them to take local jobs in their community, particular as drivers. "Every job you take frees up another man to join the fight."
I find this doubly interesting, first, because so many women had uprooted themselves to take these jobs that they were being turned away, and secondly because they chose a horror show to target women listeners. I find it fascinating that horror was once gendered as a feminine genre. (But then, look at Val Lewton's movies, which are similarly aimed at female audiences.)
Mubarak — January 4, 2011
It feels as if they "photoshop" the face of an older teenager girl onto a body of a man. I don't know why I feel that, but I do
john — January 4, 2011
Michigan Woman Who Inspired WWII 'Rosie' Poster Has Died:
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/12/30/132484640/michigan-woman-who-inspired-wwii-rosie-poster-has-died
Altagracia — January 4, 2011
Ironically, women still face a hostile work environment in the so called "non-traditional" workplaces like construction, firefighting, plumbing, etc. Even the trade, technical high schools continue to segregate girls into "traditional" trades such as cosmetology. That, more than its historical context, is what makes the poster relevant today. Rosie is not the image that accompanied women into law, medicine, and other professions, but she, and the women who worked heavy industries back then, continue to inspire women's struggle to gain entry into "non-traditional" workplaces and to overcome hostile work environments once they get in.
Artistcolor — January 4, 2011
@Mubarak: I assume you mean the Norman Rockwell cover? That is pretty funny, considering he painted in oil paints a good 40 yrs before Photoshop was invented. Ie this is the work of a wildly popular, esteemed, professional illustrator working for the cover of a major magazine, whose work would have been sketched, then approved by the magazine, then painted in oil paints on canvas, not some joke stuck together by someone in their computer on a whim.
That the woman was young (ie working age but probably not at home with six kids as would not have been unusual for a mother in 1940s) but with a very strong body (do you look at the tool she would be holding and using in her daily work! now if that doesn't make muscles I don't know what does) would have both been conscious decisions carefully conceived and drawn out, and painted by hand. And I believe Norman Rockwell usually worked from live models...
Anyways, it is sad that when we see a strong woman we feel they must have photoshopped a woman's head onto a male body. Note that in most of the world, including North America in the past, women do most of the manual labour (men ride horses, women carry water and wood on their backs and heads)... and North America would have had a lot of farm girls... not shopping mall girls.
K — January 5, 2011
People often think of Norman Rockwell's paintings as cheesy, but he actually produced a number of paintings encouraging racial integration and other forms of ethnic/racial equality.
Morag — January 5, 2011
I don't think her head is unrealistically small - we are just used to very slender women being the default image and their heads look bigger in proportion than they do in stocky women. In fact, I remember when very slender women were becoming more prevalent on movies and TV in the late 90's they used to get derided as the "lollipop heads" because of that very phenomenon. If her head was bigger, she would look like ordinary - and I think she is supposed to be an archetypal image of strength.
Also, as a riveter, she has a very thick and muscular neck, which we are certainly not used to seeing even in very muscular women. Body building women often exercise these less, because big necks create such a "hulking" effect.
Anyway, here is the reality to compare it to:
http://womenshistory.about.com/od/warwwii/ig/World-War-II-Rosies--Pictures/Another-Rosie-the-Riveter.-UzO.htm
Woz — January 5, 2011
Further taking the air out of the Rosie-as-feminist-icon image, I remember in an undergrad US history course seeing posters of Rosie that were made after the war, in which she was wearing a house dress and pearls saying something to the effect of "I'd never steal a job from a man," encouraging women to leave the factory and give their vacated jobs back to returning GIs.
Couldn't find it in a quick google search, but I know it exists somewhere...
Altagracia — January 5, 2011
Let's not forget that the Rosie ad campaign that recruited two million women into the defense and related industries when needed, and then told them to go back home when the men returned, was created by the Ad Council (then known as the War Advertising Council. I've read that this was the most successful ad campaign in the history of advertising, and it still holds that record. Here's a call out from the Ad Council's brochure:
WOMEN IN WAR JOBS
It wasn't the first time women were recruited for jobs in
offices and factories, but in 1943, the mandate was not
just economic. Ads like this made an abiding change in
the relationship between women and the workplace.
Employment outside ofthe home became socially
accepted, even desirable.
fleurdemal — January 6, 2011
@ Morag - "Anyway, here is the reality to compare it to:
http://womenshistory.about.com/od/warwwii/ig/World-War-II-Rosies–Pictures/Another-Rosie-the-Riveter.-UzO.htm"
Excellent reference to draw our attention to - the woman in that photo is beautiful!
And my 2 cents on the "odd" physical structure: Rockwell knows his design and anatomy and any "abherance" is completely intentional and thought out; his superior technique is indisputable. With figurative exaggeration, Rockwell surely tips his hat to previous historical masters, like Rubens and Michelangelo (yes, even though M. was gay, he still is a formidable and respectable artist female form or otherwise, despite what other comments have alluded to - GRRR).
Also, Rockwell was very tuned into popular culture, where the "super hero" of comics gained in prominence. Wonder Woman's recent rise and success very well might have greased the wheels of public imagination, opening the gates to images of power combined with femininity. In recent years, we've gotten more and more accustomed to waif warrior-esses, the new Sarah Connors and Dollhouse babes who can kiss ass even though they look like they barely have strength to hold up their own skulls.
As a teenager, I thought Rockwell cloying and milchtoast, now I appreciate his kind eye - he interprets the ordinary without glorification, adding softness and humor. Something not often aimed for,and less often achieved.
Suggestion Saturday: January 8, 2011 | On The Other Hand — January 8, 2011
[...] Myth-Making and the “We Can Do It!” Poster. Which picture do you think of when I mention Rosie the Riveter? I just recently found out that the poster most commonly associated with this World War II character isn’t actually the real Rosie. [...]
Anonymous — February 15, 2011
i don't like this poster
Anonymous — February 15, 2011
because is very ugly D:
Ah, the mixed messages. « Feminéma — March 9, 2011
[...] Rosie the Riveter poster was more ambivalent than we’d like to believe, as I read recently at Sociological Images. Damn scholars, always putting a damper on our views of the [...]
Feminist Friday–Going Rogue « Iconoclast or Malcontent? — June 3, 2011
[...] Will the Real Rosie the Riveter Please Stand Up? Saw this discussion over on Sociological Images either yesterday or today; there’s no way of knowing. Well, I could go into my browser [...]
C Arthur — November 17, 2011
Check this magazine cover illustration:
http://issuu.com/unido/docs/makingit8
Lubar — January 22, 2012
A quick additional note on the Westinghouse poster. Yes, these were posted for just two weeks, for Westinghouse employees. You might be amused to know the the one just two weeks earlier (posted Jan. 1 to Jan. 15) was entitled, "Any questions about your work ...Ask your supervisor."
Dark killer — June 19, 2012
What do we call Rosie the riverter if she in singapore
We Can Do It! | Black & Blonde — July 16, 2012
[...] The original. [...]
See, All Hope is Not Lost For Gen Y (Real Men at Colorado Batman Shooting) | Miranda2586 — July 24, 2012
[...] to be the epitome of awesomeness, though they are younger. Even the women were powerful…Source …though apparently the power wore off after a while. They must have just been on spinach in [...]
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Quora — August 31, 2012
How did the Westinghouse "We Can Do It!" poster become a feminist icon?...
This piece contends that the "We Can Do It!" poster was actually internal propaganda intended to placate labor unrest. Are its facts straight? And if so, how did the poster become a symbol of unity under feminism from a two-week internal document? Wh...
THAT LIT, LIT LIFE (with global characteristics) 8 (of 14) | Ploughshares — October 22, 2012
[...] The original image is actually a poster illustration by J. Howard Miller, an artist commissioned by Westinghouse. You can read more about him in Gwen Sharp’s discussion debunking the myth behind this image: [...]
I Am Woman: Where Do We Begin? : Forever Twenty Somethings — March 15, 2013
[...] approach, and it works for a few of us, for a little while. We come together under an umbrella with Geraldine Hoff‘s iconic face plastered on it. We chant, “Run the World” like we are [...]
Don’t Call Them Baby, Sweetheart, Honey… or Feminist | Painting the Grey Area — March 21, 2013
[...] Fun fact: the original version of this poster probably had very little to do with female empowerment. [...]
She’s Making History, Working for Victory, Rosie the Riveter! | Rosie the Riveter We Can Do It! — March 28, 2013
[...] Myth-Making and the “We Can Do It! Poster: The Society Pages has a VERY interesting article about the mythology behind Rosie. For instance, the Rosie poster is often misidentified as a “government recruiting” poster, “in fact, created by J. Howard Miller as part of a series of posters for the Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company — the Westinghouse logo is clearly visible just under the woman’s arm, and the badge on her shirt collar is the badge employees wore on the plant floor, including an employee number.” [...]
FOR ASSESSMENT 360mc: Analysis on Power Artefact | chelseaballaamyr3 — November 27, 2013
[…] http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/01/04/myth-making-and-the-we-can-do-it-poster/ […]
Today’s Worksheet | Ms. Manchac's APUSH — March 27, 2014
[…] Women and Propaganda […]
Save Rosie! A Piece Of Women’s History Faces The Wrecking Ball | Most Searched Ever — April 29, 2014
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[…] Rosie? Who is Rosie? […]
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[…] is the real Rosie the Riveter. Click through here to learn the […]
Joseph Meyer — July 29, 2014
I'm not entirely sure that I understand the point of this article, but it would appear to promote the popular meme that communism was somehow benign and opposition to it suspect. A hundred million corpses might take issue with that assertion, not to mention many more who were imprisoned behind walls in their own countries.
Gemma Seymour — July 30, 2014
An interesting thing about society is that it often repurposes things. The Westinghouse poster might not have meant the same thing to the people of 1944 that it means to the people of 2014, but then, neither does the Constitution of the United States. If you tried to pass the Constitution or the Bill of Rights today, it would probably fail abysmally.
I don't know how old you are, but I'm old enough to have enjoyed the stories of my grandparents' generation about the war. I sometimes forget in my middle age that a goodly proportion of the adult writers on the Internet nowadays are young enough to be my children.
During the war, quite a number of conventionally attractive women participated with equal fervor in the war effort, and quite a number of women held onto the trappings of conventional femininity with a vehemence, precisely because they were symbols that tyranny could not entirely destroy their lives, as well as because of the circumstances of mortality. My mother's mother tells me that approximately 50% of the young men from her town died in the war.
Maybe you think the girls filling their dance cards down at the USO hall weren't as valuable to the war effort as Rosie, IDK. But one thing I do know is this: both of my grandfathers fought in WWII and lived to tell about it, my maternal grandfather in the US Navy, and my paternal grandfather as a guerrilla fighter in the Philippines under the Japanese occupation, and both of my grandmothers contributed in every way they could.
My mother's mother was one of the pretty ones. I remember seeing pictures of her from the war for the first time when I was in my teens, and being shocked at how beautiful she really was; to me, she'd always been fat and old (as I thought of such things at the time). My father's mother died halfway around the world when I was a small child in the late 1960's, and I never met her, but I know something of how she lived and what life was like for her when the Japanese soldiers would come around looking for my grandfather, who was busy blowing up Japanese fuel and ammo dumps.
So, you will pardon me if I see a "pretty" "Rosie" and take from her a message that her creators didn't intend. Intent, after all, is not magick. Perhaps we would all do better to resist the impulse to judge the "validity" of everything as if something's (or someone's) origins were the sum total of their being.
Isn't the most core tenet of Feminism "biology is not destiny"?!
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Guest Post: Rosie the Riveter and Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl: Exploring the Historical Roots of a Gendered Visual Symbol | Unwritten Histories — February 7, 2017
[…] [5] For an excellent explanation of ways that J. Howard Miller’s “We Can Do It” image was not necessarily a celebration of female power, see Gwen Sharp, “Myth-Making and the ‘We Can Do It!’ Poster,” Sociological Images (blog), The Society Pages, January 4, 2011, https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/01/04/myth-making-and-the-we-can-do-it-poster/. […]
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[…] SHARP, Gwen. « Myth-Making and the ‘We Can Do It!’ Poster ». Sociological Images (blog), The Society Pages (4 janvier 2011). [En ligne] https://thesocietypages.org/socimages/2011/01/04/myth-making-and-the-we-can-do-it-poster/. […]
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