Synopses & Reviews
Collected here are the Pulitzer Prize-winning photographs (updated to include winners through 2003)--pictures that influenced our thinking in times of crisis and sometimes stirred us to action. Among them are Joe Rosenthal's World War II photograph of the raising of the flag over Mount Suribachi on Iwo Jima, commemorating the more than 6,000 marines who died in the battle for that small Pacific island, and Robert Jackson's photograph of Jack Ruby killing Lee Harvey Oswald, recalling the anguish of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. The pictures document that we have lived in a violent age, showing the brutalities of war, racism, and despotism. But the Pulitzer photojournalists also recorded tender and compassionate moments, as in Brian Lanker's pictures of joyous parents at the birth of their child, or Scott Shaw's photographs of the rescue of a little girl trapped in a well. In coming centuries, these indelible images will inevitably be used to illustrate the triumphs and tragedies of our era.
Synopsis
The defining moments of the tumultuous second half of the twentieth century captured in riveting photographs. COLLECTED HERE are the Pulitzer Prize-winning photographs, updated to include winners through 2003. Among them are Joe Rosenthal's photograph of the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima and Robert Jackson's photograph of Jack Ruby killing Lee Harvey Oswald. There are also tender and compassionate moments, as in Brian Lanker's pictures of joyous parents at the birth of their child, or Scott Shaw's photographs of the rescue of a little girl trapped in a well. These indelible images will inevitably be used to illustrate the triumphs and tragedies of our era.
Synopsis
The defining moments of the tumultuous second half of the twentieth century captured in riveting photographs.
About the Author
Cyma Rubin is president of Business of Entertainment, Inc.Eric Newton is the Newseum's news historian.