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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | A family smokes together during a quiet moment at a squatter camp for poor white South Africans at Coronation Park in Krugersdorp, March 13, 2010. (REUTERS/Finbarr O’Reilly) | | | Last edited: by railroaded |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Living quarters and "juke joint" for migratory workers, Belle Glade, Fla. (1941). Source: Farm Services Administration (1939-1944). See also Library of Congress website. | | | Last edited: by railroaded |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Family in crowded living quarters in Essen, Germany, during French occupation (1923). Source: George Grantham Bain Collection (Library of Congress). |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | About Jacob Riis' book "How the Other Half Lives". |
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Registered: March 10, 2009 | Posts: 2,248 |
| Posted: | | | | You might enjoy this |
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Registered: September 18, 2008 | Reputation: | Posts: 2,650 |
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Registered: March 10, 2009 | Posts: 2,248 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting samuelrichardscott: Quote:
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Some say it was taken in Toulon as the French soldiers leave for Africa. Some say it was taken as Nazi tanks rolled into Paris. Others claim it was taken in Marseilles as historic French battle flags were taken aboard ships for protection against the conquering Nazis. No matter what incident prompted him to cry, the French civilian cries across decades from his faded photograph. He cries not only for his generation, but also for his century. The photo, one of the most heart-rending pictures of the Second World War, was possibly taken by George Mejat for Fox Movietone News/AP. Source: http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/ |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Hiroshima, 6th August 1945 The first two photos showed people who escaped serious injury applying cooking oil to their burns near Miyuki bridge. All five, source: http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/ | | | Last edited: by railroaded |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | A policeman, his head bandaged, issues certificates to civilians. | | | Last edited: by railroaded |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Photo shows the shadow of a person who was disintegrated at the moment of the blast. (These steps were cut out and now inside the Hiroshima Peace Park museum.) | | | Last edited: by railroaded |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | This photo shows the damage to Matsushige family’s barbershop. |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | Henri Cartier-Bresson: Quai de Javel (Ragpickers), Paris, 1932 |
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Registered: December 16, 2007 | Posts: 926 |
| Posted: | | | | This picture could be hard take for several people, my excuses for that BUT it was on the front page of The New York Times in 1979. Here is a short history about this photograph (Source: http://iconicphotos.wordpress.com/) After Ayatollah Khomeini seized power in Iran, the nation’s 4 million Sunni Muslim Kurds rejected his rules and his religious beliefs and demended independence. Khomeini sent in his Revolutionary Guards, who slaughtered thousands of Kurds using mock trials. On August 27th, 1979, in Sanadaj, nine Kurdish rebels and two former police officers were tried and sentenced to death. Their execution by firing squad was documented in startling detail by the above photograph, published in Ettela’at, a Tehran newspaper. A United Press International staffer in Tehran saw the photo and went to Ettela’at to obtain the photo. He then transmitted it via wire to UPI’s European office. On August 29th, various international newspapers including the New York Times put the photo on their frontpages. For security reasons, the name of the staffer was never revealed. The photographer’s name had also remained unknown. The editor of the Ettela’at was afraid of government reprisals and didn’t mention the name of the photographer. Predictably enough, the Revolutionary Guards later invaded the newspaper’s office and confiscated the photos. They didn’t shut the newspaper because it was the oldest paper in the country, and damage done by such a shut-down would’ve been much worse. The photo, named Firing Squad in Iran or more poetically, “the Numbing Transition from Life to Death” was the only anonymous winner of a Pulitzer Prize in the 90-year history of the award. In 2006, an Iranian photographer Jahangir Razmi revealed that he was the photographer and claimed the award. The irony was that Razmi had been the official photographer of Iranian Presidents since 1997. See all the photos he took that fateful day here. |
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Registered: March 13, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 13,202 |
| Posted: | | | | Forgive me if the answer is obvious but, what, exactly, is the point of this thread? | | | No dictator, no invader can hold an imprisoned population by force of arms forever. There is no greater power in the universe than the need for freedom. Against this power, governments and tyrants and armies cannot stand. The Centauri learned this lesson once. We will teach it to them again. Though it take a thousand years, we will be free. - Citizen G'Kar |
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