1. How to keep Rosie the riveter from contracting VD: A case study of how U.S. social reformers used public relations during World War II.
- Author
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Anderson, William B.
- Subjects
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WORLD War II , *SOCIAL reformers , *PUBLIC relations , *SEXUALLY transmitted diseases , *SOCIAL participation - Abstract
• World War II public relations campaign equated sexual health with patriotism in attempt to lower VD rates. • Anti-VD campaign designed to help improve industrial productivity. • Social reformers used public relations during wartime in a similar fashion to how government agencies used the function. Much of public relations historiography on World War II focuses on the government uses of the function. This study fills a gap in the literature by exploring how a non-governmental organization called the American Social Hygiene Association (ASHA) used persuasion communication efforts to enlist the aid of management, labor, and local communities in the United States in the control of venereal disease (VD) rates. The case study advances a more diverse understanding of how activists have utilized public relations and found that the social reformers' use of persuasive communications strategies and activities aligned with the view of public relations as the strategic and intentional participation in the social construction of meaning to achieve a planned outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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