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Rennie, P., 'An investigation
into the design, production and display contexts of industrial
safety posters produced by the Royal Society for the Prevention
of Accidents during WW2'
PhD thesis, completed January 2004. London College of Printing.
This thesis examines
a group of posters produced by the Industrial Service of the Royal
Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) during WW2 (1939-45).
The posters were commissioned to reduce factory accidents and
raise awareness amongst workers of the potentially fatal dangers
of workshop and factory. The posters were designed by a varied
but distinct group of designers including Tom Eckersley, who was
later closely associated with the London College of Printing.
The thesis is supported by reference to the RoSPA archive at the
University of Liverpool and other sources.
The circumstances of WW2 are presented as demanding
a more urgent response in the production of propaganda than had
previously been required of poster communications. The requirements
of increased speed and economy in production could only be met
by an engagement, on behalf of printers and commissioning agencies,
with the processes of mechanical reproduction. This is described,
in Part One, by reference to the administrative structure of RoSPA
and the personalities that informed its Industrial Safety campaign.
Chief amongst these characters are Ernest Bevin, Ashley Havinden,
Francis Meynell and Tom Eckersley. The technologies of mechanical
reproduction are described in relation to the production of the
RoSPA campaign by reference to RoSPA's printers, Loxley Brothers
of Sheffield.
Part Two of the thesis examines the RoSPA campaign
within a wider cultural context. The style and content of the
RoSPA posters is used as evidence of communication and political
engagement with audiences previously ignored by Government communications
or propaganda.
The posters are proposed as evidence contributing
to a programme of socially progressive reform that George Orwell
recognised as both identifiably English and politically revolutionary
and as a necessary, but in itself insufficient, condition for
victory in "total war" (a war involving military combatants
and civilian populations). The posters therefore make manifest
a change in relations between capital and labour in Britain. This
is presented as part of a transformation that accounts, in part,
for the election of Attlee's reforming Government in 1946 and
for the subsequent policies of welfare reform and reconstruction.
The posters are presented as part of an evolving
visual language that is effectively propagandistic and socialist.
This visual language is presented as both radical and as drawing
on diverse strands of existing imagery, such as the visual language
of Surrealism and of Left politics, to address its new audiences
of women and industrial workers. An unexpected alignment between
Modernist design and Nonconfomist values is revealed to be at
the heart of RoSPA's project and is identified as significant
in the configuration of English Modernism. This evolution is then
suggested to have contributed to a change in the nature and significance
of graphic authorship in Britain.
The RoSPA posters correspond to the hopes, expressed
by Walter Benjamin in The Author as Producer (1934), for a socially
progressive, politically engaged and mass-produced form of communication
as a consequence of the emancipatory potential of Modernism. The
Modernist credentials of the RoSPA campaign disabuse two powerful
orthodoxies - that Modernism was resisted and rejected in England
and that war propaganda marked a retreat to the banal and literal
in terms of visual communications.
A catalogue of RoSPA posters is appended
to the thesis. (Not a catalogue raisonné.)
web: www.rennart.co.uk
e-mail: p@rennart.co.uk
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