Ficheiro:My Lai massacre.jpg

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Ficheiro orixinal(3.643 × 2.429 píxeles; tamaño do ficheiro: 1,48 MB; tipo MIME: image/jpeg)

Resumo

Descrición
English: Photo taken by United States Army photographer Ronald L. Haeberle on March 16, 1968 in the aftermath of the My Lai massacre showing mostly women and children dead on a road.
Data
Orixe Copied from Krysstal.com, "The Acts of the Democracies" http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_vietnam_mylai.html
Autoría Ronald L. Haeberle
Licenza
(Reuso deste ficheiro)
Public domain
Esta imagem é um trabalho de um soldado ou funcionário do Exército dos Estados Unidos, tirada ou feita durante o curso de uma tarefa oficial. Como trabalho do Governo Federal dos Estados Unidos, a imagem está em domínio público.

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See also discussion of copyright status there.

The photo is copied and used in many places which mention the massacre. This particular image was copied from the KryssTal Web Site (which also shows more graphic alternate images).[1]

According to Camilla Griggers, professor of Visual Communication and Linguistics at California State University, Channel Islands:

The Army photographer, Ronald Haeberle, assigned to Charlie Company on March 16th, 1968 had two cameras. One was an Army standard; one was his personal camera. The film on the Army owned camera, i.e., the official camera of the State, showed standard operations that is, 'authorized' and 'official' operations including interrogating villagers and burning 'insurgent' huts. What the film on the personal camera showed, however, was different. When turned over to the press and Government by the photographer, those 'unofficial' photographs provided the grounds for a court martial. Haeberle's personal images (owned by himself and not the US Government) showed hundreds of villagers who had been killed by U.S. troops. More significantly, they showed that the dead were primarily women and children, including infants. These photographs exposed the fact that the 'insurgents' in popular discourse about Vietnam were actually unarmed civilians. The photos made visible to viewers that the 'enemy' in Vietnam was actually the indigenous Vietnamese population.[2]

According to John Morris, the photo editor for The New York Times at the time, Haeberle claimed that the images on his personal camera were his own copyright, but the Times and other publications printed them without payment in the "public interest", and also arguably in the public domain, produced by the U.S. Army:

Haeberle's pictures were arguably government property ... I guessed that Life was unlikely to pay more than $25,000 (in fact, it paid $20,000) ... In late morning, we received word that London papers, copying the photos from The Plain Dealer, were going ahead without payment, ignoring the copyright. The New York Post followed, in its early afternoon edition. Rosenthal decreed that it would now be ridiculous for The Times to pay. We would publish "as a matter of public interest.[3]
Outras versións Another version of this photograph is available as File:Dead from the My Lai massacre on road.jpg
  1. Krysstal.com, "The Acts of the Democracies" http://www.krysstal.com/democracy_vietnam_mylai.html
  2. Camilla Benolirao Griggers, "War and the Politics of Perception," chapter 1 from the essay Visualizing War, taken from http://www.planznow.com/texto4.html
  3. Pg 36 - Morris, John G. (Summer 1998). "Get the Picture: A Personal History of Photojournalism". The Nieman Foundation for Journalism vol. 52 (no. 2): 32-38. Bill Kovach. ISSN 0028-9817. Retrieved on April 17, 2010.

Licenza

Este trabalho está em domínio público porque foi publicado nos Estados Unidos entre 1929 e 1977, inclusive, sem um aviso de direitos autorais. A menos que seu autor esteja morto por vários anos, não é do domínio público nos países ou áreas que não se aplica a regra do curto prazo para as obras dos E.U.A, como o Canadá (50 apm), China (50 apm, com exceção de Hong Kong e Macau), Alemanha (70 apm), México (100 apm), Suíça (70 apm), e de outros países com tratados individuais. Veja esta página para mais explicações.

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Pés de foto

Engada unha explicación dunha liña do representa este ficheiro
Lei de1940 | 1969 Artigo 5° do Inciso XLVII do código Penal Federativo Forense Nacional Brasileiro aplica-se disposto em função primária governamental explícita atribuída. Prof.Dr.Msd.pHd. Ricardo Alessandro Moura Brasil. verdædė, verdade.

Historial do ficheiro

Prema nunha data/hora para ver o ficheiro tal e como estaba nese momento.

Data/HoraMiniaturaDimensiónsUsuarioComentario
actual20 de xuño de 2023 ás 15:32Miniatura da versión ás 15:32 do 20 de xuño de 20233.643 × 2.429 (1,48 MB)JohnKentHigher resolution
31 de marzo de 2016 ás 21:58Miniatura da versión ás 21:58 do 31 de marzo de 2016714 × 486 (303 kB)Jacek Halickimore light
7 de decembro de 2007 ás 00:46Miniatura da versión ás 00:46 do 7 de decembro de 2007714 × 486 (103 kB)Jeeny~commonswikiImage modify to clarify - brightness/contrast/sharpen
21 de xuño de 2006 ás 15:46Miniatura da versión ás 15:46 do 21 de xuño de 2006714 × 486 (108 kB)CeresnetMatanza de My Lai tomada de la Wikipedia Inglesa.

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