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Once dubbed “napalm girl,” she bears the physical and psychological scars of the war that nearly took her life. Her greatest ...
The image, captured 53 years ago this weekend during the Vietnam War, galvanized the anti-war movement in the U.S. But a new documentary raises questions about who was behind the camera.
The girl in the photograph, Kim Phúc Phan Thị, defected to Canada some decades later. In 2022, she penned an op-ed in The New York Times, looking back on the 50 years since the picture was ...
The image, captured 53 years ago this weekend during the Vietnam War, galvanized the anti-war movement in the U.S. But a new documentary raises questions about who was behind the camera.
In reality, the United States began reducing its combat presence in Vietnam more than three years before “Napalm Girl” was published. By June 1972, nearly 90 percent of US troops had left.
By DAVID BAUDER, Associated Press. It is one of the 20th century’s most memorable images: a naked girl, screaming, running from a napalm bombing during the Vietnam War.
It drove home the consequences of the Vietnam War to readers in the United States, where it won a Pulitzer Prize. But who took the photo, widely known as Napalm Girl?
Fifty-three years ago, the devastating impact of the Vietnam War was captured in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photo of the "napalm girl." A documentary raises questions about who took the photo.
Since its premiere at Sundance, 'The Stringer' has led to a divisive re-examination of the credit for the Pulitzer Prize–winning 1972 photograph that captured the horrors of the Vietnam War.
The image, captured 53 years ago this weekend during the Vietnam War, galvanized the anti-war movement in the U.S. But a new documentary raises questions about who was behind the camera.
The image, captured 53 years ago this weekend during the Vietnam War, galvanized the anti-war movement in the U.S. But a new documentary raises questions about who was behind the camera.
The image, captured 53 years ago this weekend during the Vietnam War, galvanized the anti-war movement in the U.S. But a new documentary raises questions about who was behind the camera.
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