| World War II is often described as a clash of civilizations, but like all international
                                    conflicts, it was also a war of resources. Combatants competed to sustain soldiers
                                    overseas and across borders and to maintain morale and train troops at home. Attitudes
                                    toward the enemy differed among the major players in the war. While the Allies mostly
                                    provided prisoners of war with decent, if second-class, fare, starvation was used
                                    as a military tactic by the Axis. Civilians and POWs suffered the consequences. This exhibition explores the effect the war had on individuals relationships with
                                    the production and distribution of food. It touches on topics such as the role of
                                    propaganda on the home front in conserving resources for those on the war front, the
                                    ingeniuty of individuals who came up with recipes and grew Victory Gardens in an attempt
                                    to offset this lack of resources, and how talking about recipes and food in the concentration
                                    camps helped to sustain victims of the Holocaust. |