The Victory Sign v the Peace Sign.

How did the V victory sign come to symbolize peace too? I assume it started around the 1960s. But when and where exactly did it start and with who? And why did someone decide to use a victory sign, of all things, to mean peace?

Thank you in advance to all who reply :slight_smile:

Hippies, man.

What about ‘victory’ vs. ‘peace’ vs. ‘Up yours!’?

Cue video of the former US President George Bush Snr on a visit to Australia, serenely gesturing to the locals to go and fuck themselves. :smiley:

Poor Bush the Elder hadn’t been advised that the traditional method of flipping the bird in Australia uses two fingers rather than one. They can be held together or in a V shape, but palm inward is always “up yours!”.

It was a surreal moment.

There was a Jane Fonda pic a few months back floating the net with the same gesture. I had no idea that it meant “up yours” until then.

Well yeah, but that doesn’t explain why the war protesters appropriated the victory symbol.

The origins of this sign are unclear but an article in a publication from the University of Manitoba offers an interesting possibility:

Wikipedia informs that the first definitive known reference to the V sign as an insult is in the works of 16th century French satirist François Rabelais i.e. around the same time as described above. Either confirmation or denial is welcome.

Wiki also reports the gesture as being especially popular in Australia, New Zealand and Ireland but doesn’t mention the US apart from the Bush faux pas in Australia.

panache45 writes:

> Well yeah, but that doesn’t explain why the war protesters appropriated the
> victory symbol.

According to this Wikipedia entry:

the V sign was being used simultaneously during the Vietnam War by people like Nixon in favor of the war and those like the protesters against it. I suspect that the sign had come merely to mean, “Everything is going well. It’s all good. We will prevail.” The use of the V sign during and after World War II was eventually thought of just as a feel-good symbol. The protesters were saying, “Hey, we feel good about what we’re doing.” As the entry explains, for the protesters it started by meaning, “We all love one another,” and gradually morphed to meaning, “We want peace.”

Depends on whether the palm or the back of the hand is aimed out. For Brits, the sweeping motion from below the waist up to eye level makes the difference quite clear.

I knew that. I was confused by Winston Churchill’s use of ‘Up Yours’ when he was indicating ‘Victory’. I found this on Wiki’s V-sign page: