Description "Daddy, What Did You Do in the Great War?" has a simple
composition. A man sits on an armchair looking out at the viewer with a distant expression. A girl (his daughter) sits on his lap with a book, while a boy plays with toy soldiers on the floor near the chair. The title, in white
cursive text, is at the bottom of the poster. The image is surrounded by a black border. The poster used a complicated printing process involving eight colour printings. Unlike many other First World War recruitment posters, which were typified by simple imagery and words, "Daddy, What Did You Do in the Great War?" has more detailed drawings with an elegant design.
Propaganda , the father, scratching his head in an gesture of unease.
Psychology as a scientific discipline and the concept of
advertising were both in their infancy at the start of the First World War. The war necessitated a use for psychological advertising—a method to control and influence the entire population, rather than targeting one specific audience for a commercial product. "Daddy, What Did You Do in the Great War?" was one of a number of posters which used psychology as a method to advertise the army to men. In contrast to other recruitment posters which were a direct
call to action, "Daddy, What Did You Do in the Great War?" was less direct in its messaging. The poster does not promise that the potential recruit's life upon enlisting will improve nor does it sell them anything;
shame is the main emotion pushed by the image. Depicting a future from those viewing it in 1915, the poster assumes that men at the time would be thinking ahead to the future. It implies that if they did not enlist, they would face humiliation back home, including from their own children. The poster's image of domesticity suggests to the viewer that men had to fight to preserve familial life. Author Karyn Burnham writes that
propaganda posters of the time "presented a carefully crafted image of
manhood defining 'real' men as those who fought for their families, for King and Country". She cites this poster as an example of an image that prompted men to assess their self-worth. == Reception ==