I think these two WWI propaganda posters construct an interesting narrative of how we appeal to the pathos and use it to suit an agenda of war. The first poster is a Russian advertisement urging women to step-up and become factory workers to support the war-effort. The Russian woman's facial expression is strong, and one that denotes a demand. She appears to be yelling as her finger creates the vector to the distant factory. The second image was distributed in America and show a very different narrative of the "Russian" woman. Here the women is defeated, her facial expression suggests more offer, and asks viewers to sympathize with this poor women with a disheveled factory in the background. Showing Russia as less stable than America provides an opportunity to evoke a gratefulness for the war, and suggests "it could be worse." The Russian poster suggests the country is in the same state as the US, rallying those available in the home country to provide labor services.