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Bloody Saturday (photograph)

Bloody Saturday (Chinese: 血腥的星期六; pinyin: Xuèxīng de Xīngqíliù) is a black-and-white photograph taken on 28 August 1937, a few minutes after a Japanese air attack struck civilians during the Battle of Shanghai in the Second Sino-Japanese War. Depicting a Chinese baby crying within the bombed-out ruins of Shanghai South railway station, the photograph became known as a cultural icon demonstrating Japanese wartime atrocities in China. The photograph was widely published, and in less than a month had been seen by more than 136 million viewers.[1] The photographer, Hearst Corporation's H. S. "Newsreel" Wong, also known as Wong Hai-Sheng or Wang Xiaoting, did not discover the identity or even the sex of the injured child, whose mother lay dead nearby. The baby was called Ping Mei.[2] One of the most memorable war photographs ever published, and perhaps the most famous newsreel scene of the 1930s,[3] the image stimulated an outpouring of Western anger against Japanese violence in China.[4] Journalist Harold Isaacs called the iconic image "one of the most successful 'propaganda' pieces of all time".[5]

Bloody Saturday, by H. S. Wong

Wong shot footage of the bombed-out South Station with his Eyemo newsreel camera, and he took several still photographs with his Leica. The famous still image, taken from the Leica, is not often referred to by name—rather, its visual elements are described. It has also been called Motherless Chinese Baby,[6] Chinese Baby, and The Baby in the Shanghai Railroad Station.[7] The photograph was denounced by Japanese nationalists who claimed that it was staged.[8]

Capturing the image edit

During the Battle of Shanghai, part of the Second Sino-Japanese War, Japanese military forces advanced upon and attacked Shanghai, China's most populous city. Wong and other newsreel men, such as Harrison Forman and George Krainukov, captured many images of the fighting, including the gruesome aftermath of an aerial bombing made by three Japanese aircraft against two prominent hotels on Nanking Road on Saturday, August 14, 1937, or "Bloody Saturday".[9] Wong was a Chinese man who owned a camera shop in Shanghai.[9][10] The National Revolutionary Army began to retreat from the city, leaving a blockade across the Huangpu River. An international group of journalists learned that aircraft from the Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN) were to bomb the blockade at 2:00 p.m. on Saturday, August 28, 1937, so many of these gathered atop the Butterfield & Swire building to take photographs of the bombing attack. At 3 pm, no aircraft were to be seen, and most of the newsmen dispersed, except H. S. "Newsreel" Wong, a cameraman working for Hearst Metrotone News, a newsreel producer. At 4 pm, 16 IJN aircraft appeared, circled, and bombed war refugees at Shanghai's South Station, killing and wounding civilians waiting for an overdue train bound for Hangzhou to the south.[11]

I noticed that my shoes were soaked with blood.

H. S. Wong[7]

Wong descended from the rooftop to the street, where he got into his car and drove quickly toward the ruined railway station. When he arrived, he noted carnage and confusion: "It was a horrible sight. People were still trying to get up. Dead and injured lay strewn across the tracks and platform. Limbs lay all over the place. Only my work helped me forget what I was seeing. I stopped to reload my camera. I noticed that my shoes were soaked with blood. I walked across the railway tracks, and made many long scenes with the burning overhead bridge in the background. Then I saw a man pick up a baby from the tracks and carry him to the platform. He went back to get another badly injured child. The mother lay dead on the tracks. As I filmed this tragedy, I heard the sound of planes returning. Quickly, I shot my remaining few feet [of film] on the baby. I ran toward the child, intending to carry him to safety, but the father returned. The bombers passed overhead. No bombs were dropped."[12]

Wong never discovered the name of the burned and crying baby, whether it was a boy or a girl, or whether they survived.[6] The next morning, he took the film from his Leica camera to the offices of China Press, where he showed enlargements to Malcolm Rosholt, saying, "Look at this one!"[6] Wong later wrote that the next morning's newspapers reported that some 1,800 people, mostly women and children, had been waiting at the railway station, and that the IJN aviators had likely mistaken them for a troop movement.[12] The Shanghai papers said that fewer than 300 people survived the attack.[12] In October, Life magazine reported about 200 dead.[11]

Publication edit

Wong sent the newsreel footage on a U.S. Navy ship to Manila and from there, the film was flown to New York City aboard a Pan American World Airways airliner.[12] Beginning in mid-September 1937, the newsreel was shown to movie theater audiences, estimated a month later to number 50 million people in the U.S. and 30 million outside of the U.S.[11] and the still image of the crying baby was printed in Hearst Corporation newspapers and affiliates, some 25 million copies.[12] A further 1.75 million non-Hearst newspaper copies showed the image in the U.S., and 4 million more people saw it as a matte reproduction in other newspapers.[11] Some 25 million people saw it internationally.[11] It first appeared in Life magazine on October 4, 1937, at which point it was estimated that 136 million people had seen it.[11][12] On the facing page in Life magazine, another photograph showed the baby on a stretcher receiving medical care.[11]

Reaction edit

The "unforgettable" image became one of the most influential photos to stir up anti-Japanese sentiment in the United States.[13] A "tidal wave of sympathy" poured out from America to China,[14] and the image was widely reproduced to elicit donations for Chinese relief efforts.[15] Catalyzed by the image, the U.S., the United Kingdom and France protested Japanese bombing of Chinese civilians in open cities.[12][16] Senator George W. Norris was influenced by the image, being convinced to abandon his longtime stance of isolationism and non-interventionism—he railed against the Japanese as "disgraceful, ignoble, barbarous, and cruel, even beyond the power of language to describe."[17] Americans used terms such as "butchers" and "murderers" against the Japanese. Subsequent to Shanghai's surrender, IJN Admiral Kōichi Shiozawa said to a reporter from The New York Times at a cocktail party: "I see your American newspapers have nicknamed me the Babykiller."[18]

The image was voted by Life readers as one of ten "Pictures of the Year" for 1937.[5] In 1944, Wong's newsreel sequence was used within the Frank Capra film The Battle of China, part of the Why We Fight series.[19]

Legacy edit

While in art school in the late 1940s, Andy Warhol painted a version of the photograph, the earliest of his many paintings based on photographs; the original artwork has not been located and may be lost.[20] Warhol's Disaster Series in the 1960s was a return to that format, to interpretations of the highly visible works produced by photojournalists.[20] In 1977, Lowell Thomas, journalist and narrator for Hearst rival Movietone News, set the photo's influence in America as high as two of the most iconic World War II images: a French man grimacing in tears as his country's soldiers abandon France in June 1940, and Joe Rosenthal's Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima, shot in February 1945.[21]

Wong retired to Taipei in the 1970s and died of diabetes at his home at the age of 81 on March 9, 1981.[22] In 2010, Wong was honored as a pioneering Asian-American journalist by the Asian American Journalists Association.[23]

In 2000, artist and journalist Miao Xiaochun projected the famous image against a white curtain, using the faintness of the projection to signify the diminution of its impact over time.[24] The photograph appeared in the Time–Life book 100 Photographs that Changed the World, published in 2003. National Geographic included the photograph in their Concise History of the World: An Illustrated Timeline in 2006.[25] The "searing image"[26] was said by National Geographic author Michael S. Sweeney to have served as the "harbinger of Eastern militarism".[27]

Allegations of falsehood edit

 
Another of Wong's Shanghai baby photographs was published by Look magazine in December 1937.

At the time, Japanese nationalists called the photograph a fake, and the Japanese government put a bounty of $50,000 on Wong's head: an amount equivalent to $1,060,000 in 2024.[28] Wong was known to be against the Japanese invasion of China and to have leftist political sympathies, and he worked for William Randolph Hearst who was famous for saying to his newsmen, "You furnish the pictures and I'll furnish the war" in relation to the Spanish–American War.[28] Another of Wong's photos appeared in Look magazine on December 21, 1937, showing a man bent over a child of perhaps five years of age, both near the crying baby.[28] The man was alleged to be Wong's assistant Taguchi who was arranging the children for best photographic effect.[28] An article in The Japan Times and Mail said the man was a rescue worker who was posing the baby and the boy for the photographer.[29] Wong described the man as the baby's father, coming to rescue his children as the Japanese aircraft returned following the bombing.[12] Japanese propagandists drew a connection between what they claimed was a falsified image and the general news accounts by U.S. and Chinese sources reporting on the fighting in Shanghai, with the aim of discrediting all reports of Japanese atrocities.[30]

In 1956, Look magazine's Arthur Rothstein supported his earlier opinion that Wong borrowed the baby and staged the photograph.[30] In 1975, Life magazine featured the famous photo in a picture book, and wrote in the caption, "It has been said that this is staged, but it is evident from various points that this is no more than a fabricated rumor."[30]

 
The baby on a stretcher, receiving first aid

In 1999, the Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History, a nationalist and denialist group founded by Fujioka Nobukatsu, a former professor at Tokyo University, published an article entitled "Manipulation of Documentary Photos in China: Fanning Flames of Hate in the USA" in which Nobukatsu and Shūdō Higashinakano argue that the photograph shows a man setting first one then two children on the railroad tracks for the purpose of making a "pitiable sight" for American viewers, to ready American citizens for war against Japan.[8] Nobukatsu argues that Wong added smoke to make the image more dramatic,[30] but Rosholt wrote that the train station was still smoking when Wong arrived.[6] Aforementioned Japanese revisionists do not deny the bombing, nor that Chinese civilians were killed and wounded, but claim the presentation of the photograph as a fake allows for the easy interpretation that there are further falsehoods in the historical record.[30] In the article, Nobukatsu and Higashinakano do not mention the additional Wong photo published in Life magazine which shows the baby crying on a medical stretcher as it is given first aid by a Chinese Boy Scout.[11][30]

Wong filmed more newsreels covering Japanese attacks in China, including the Battle of Xuzhou in May 1938 and aerial bombings in Guangzhou in June.[31] He operated under British protection, but continued death threats from Japanese nationalists drove him to leave Shanghai with his family and to relocate to Hong Kong.[12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Van der Veen, Maurits (2003). Uriel's Legacy. Trafford Publishing. p. 262. ISBN 1-55395-462-9.
  2. ^ Bradley, James (2016). The China Mirage - The Hidden History of American Disaster in Asia. New York: Back Bay Books / Little, Brown and Company. pp. 176–177. ISBN 9780316336178.
  3. ^ Doherty, Thomas (1999). Projections of war: Hollywood, American culture, and World War II (2 ed.). Columbia University Press. p. 105. ISBN 0-231-11635-7.
  4. ^ Tuchman, Barbara W. (1972). Stilwell and the American experience in China, 1911–45. Bantam Books. p. 214. ISBN 0-553-14579-7.
  5. ^ a b Dower, John W. (2010). Cultures of War: Pearl Harbor / Hiroshima / 9-11 / Iraq. W. W. Norton & Company. pp. 158–159. ISBN 978-0-393-06150-5.
  6. ^ a b c d Cameron, Mrs. Richard; Malcolm Rosholt (January 21, 1972). "Letters to the Editors: The Child". Life. Vol. 72, no. 2. Time, Inc. p. 27. ISSN 0024-3019.
  7. ^ a b Faber, John (1978). Great news photos and the stories behind them (2 ed.). Courier Dover Publications. pp. 74–75. ISBN 0-486-23667-6.
  8. ^ a b Nobukatsu, Fujioka; Higashinakano, Shūdō (1999). . Exploding the Myth:The Problem of Photographic "Evidence" (Photos from The Rape of Nanking). Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History. Archived from the original on 2012-08-29. Retrieved January 18, 2011.
  9. ^ a b . Time. Time, Inc. September 13, 1937. Archived from the original on September 2, 2010.
  10. ^ Camhi, Leslie. "Film: A Dragon Lady and a Quiet Cultural Warrior". The New York Times, January 11, 2004. Retrieved on July 3, 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h "The Camera Overseas: 136,000,000 People See This Picture of Shanghai's South Station". Life. Vol. 3, no. 14. Time, Inc. October 4, 1937. pp. 102–103. ISSN 0024-3019.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i Faber, John (1960). Great moments in news photography: from the historical files of the National Press Photographers Association. T. Nelson. p. 74.
  13. ^ Roth, Mitchel P. (1997). Historical dictionary of war journalism. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 219. ISBN 0-313-29171-3.
  14. ^ Winchester, Simon (2008). Bomb, book and compass: Joseph Needham and the great secrets of China. Viking. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-670-91378-7.
  15. ^ Klein, Christina (2003). Cold War orientalism: Asia in the middlebrow imagination, 1945–1961. University of California Press. p. 177. ISBN 0-520-22469-8.
  16. ^ Goldberg, Vicki (1991). The power of photography: how photographs changed our lives. Abbeville Press. p. 243. ISBN 1-55859-039-0.
  17. ^ Paterson, Thomas G.; Clifford, John Garry; Hagan, Kenneth J. (1999). American Foreign Relations: A history since 1895. American Foreign Relations. Vol. 2 (5 ed.). Houghton Mifflin. p. 151. ISBN 0-395-93887-2.
  18. ^ Dong, Stella (2001). Shanghai: The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City. HarperCollins. pp. 216–217. ISBN 0-06-093481-6.
  19. ^ US National Archives (2015-03-17), Why We Fight: The Battle of China, retrieved 2017-10-16
  20. ^ a b Smith, Patrick S. (1986). Andy Warhol's art and films. Studies in the fine arts. Vol. 54 (2 ed.). UMI Research Press. pp. 40, 125. ISBN 0-8357-1733-X.
  21. ^ Thomas, Lowell (1977). So long until tomorrow: from Quaker Hill to Kathmandu. Morrow. pp. 83–86. ISBN 0-688-03236-2.
  22. ^ . Taiwan Today. Government Information Office, Republic of China (Taiwan). May 1, 1981. Archived from the original on October 9, 2011. Retrieved January 18, 2011.
  23. ^ "Honor Roll List: Pioneers, past and present". Asian American Journalists Association. December 24, 2010. Retrieved January 18, 2011.
  24. ^ Hung, Wu (2008). Making history: Wu Hung on contemporary art. Timezone 8 Limited. p. 142. ISBN 978-988-99617-0-1.
  25. ^ Kagan, Neil (2006). National Geographic concise history of the world: an illustrated timeline. National Geographic Traveler. National Geographic Books. p. 325. ISBN 0-7922-8364-3.
  26. ^ Hamilton, John Maxwell (1988). "Red Star Over China". Edgar Snow, a biography. Indiana University Press. p. 83. ISBN 0-253-31909-9.
  27. ^ Sweeney, Michael S. (2002). From the front: the story of war featuring correspondents' chronicles. National Geographic. p. 148. ISBN 0-7922-6919-5.
  28. ^ a b c d French, Paul (2009). Through the looking glass: China's foreign journalists from opium wars to Mao. Hong Kong University Press. p. 192. ISBN 978-962-209-982-1.
  29. ^ Low, Morris (2003). "The Japanese Colonial Eye: Science, Exploration, and Empire". In Christopher Pinney, Nicolas Peterson (ed.). Photography's other histories. Duke University Press. p. 117. ISBN 0-8223-3113-6.
  30. ^ a b c d e f Morris-Suzuki, Tessa (2005). The past within us: media, memory, history. Nissan Institute-Routledge Japanese studies. Verso. pp. 72–75. ISBN 1-85984-513-4.
  31. ^ . The 1930s: Prelude to War Video Library. UCLA Film and Television Archive. Archived from the original on January 4, 2011. Retrieved January 18, 2011.

bloody, saturday, photograph, other, uses, bloody, saturday, disambiguation, bloody, saturday, chinese, 血腥的星期六, pinyin, xuèxīng, xīngqíliù, black, white, photograph, taken, august, 1937, minutes, after, japanese, attack, struck, civilians, during, battle, shan. For other uses see Bloody Saturday disambiguation Bloody Saturday Chinese 血腥的星期六 pinyin Xuexing de Xingqiliu is a black and white photograph taken on 28 August 1937 a few minutes after a Japanese air attack struck civilians during the Battle of Shanghai in the Second Sino Japanese War Depicting a Chinese baby crying within the bombed out ruins of Shanghai South railway station the photograph became known as a cultural icon demonstrating Japanese wartime atrocities in China The photograph was widely published and in less than a month had been seen by more than 136 million viewers 1 The photographer Hearst Corporation s H S Newsreel Wong also known as Wong Hai Sheng or Wang Xiaoting did not discover the identity or even the sex of the injured child whose mother lay dead nearby The baby was called Ping Mei 2 One of the most memorable war photographs ever published and perhaps the most famous newsreel scene of the 1930s 3 the image stimulated an outpouring of Western anger against Japanese violence in China 4 Journalist Harold Isaacs called the iconic image one of the most successful propaganda pieces of all time 5 Bloody Saturday by H S WongWong shot footage of the bombed out South Station with his Eyemo newsreel camera and he took several still photographs with his Leica The famous still image taken from the Leica is not often referred to by name rather its visual elements are described It has also been called Motherless Chinese Baby 6 Chinese Baby and The Baby in the Shanghai Railroad Station 7 The photograph was denounced by Japanese nationalists who claimed that it was staged 8 Contents 1 Capturing the image 2 Publication 3 Reaction 4 Legacy 4 1 Allegations of falsehood 5 See also 6 ReferencesCapturing the image editDuring the Battle of Shanghai part of the Second Sino Japanese War Japanese military forces advanced upon and attacked Shanghai China s most populous city Wong and other newsreel men such as Harrison Forman and George Krainukov captured many images of the fighting including the gruesome aftermath of an aerial bombing made by three Japanese aircraft against two prominent hotels on Nanking Road on Saturday August 14 1937 or Bloody Saturday 9 Wong was a Chinese man who owned a camera shop in Shanghai 9 10 The National Revolutionary Army began to retreat from the city leaving a blockade across the Huangpu River An international group of journalists learned that aircraft from the Imperial Japanese Navy IJN were to bomb the blockade at 2 00 p m on Saturday August 28 1937 so many of these gathered atop the Butterfield amp Swire building to take photographs of the bombing attack At 3 pm no aircraft were to be seen and most of the newsmen dispersed except H S Newsreel Wong a cameraman working for Hearst Metrotone News a newsreel producer At 4 pm 16 IJN aircraft appeared circled and bombed war refugees at Shanghai s South Station killing and wounding civilians waiting for an overdue train bound for Hangzhou to the south 11 I noticed that my shoes were soaked with blood H S Wong 7 Wong descended from the rooftop to the street where he got into his car and drove quickly toward the ruined railway station When he arrived he noted carnage and confusion It was a horrible sight People were still trying to get up Dead and injured lay strewn across the tracks and platform Limbs lay all over the place Only my work helped me forget what I was seeing I stopped to reload my camera I noticed that my shoes were soaked with blood I walked across the railway tracks and made many long scenes with the burning overhead bridge in the background Then I saw a man pick up a baby from the tracks and carry him to the platform He went back to get another badly injured child The mother lay dead on the tracks As I filmed this tragedy I heard the sound of planes returning Quickly I shot my remaining few feet of film on the baby I ran toward the child intending to carry him to safety but the father returned The bombers passed overhead No bombs were dropped 12 Wong never discovered the name of the burned and crying baby whether it was a boy or a girl or whether they survived 6 The next morning he took the film from his Leica camera to the offices of China Press where he showed enlargements to Malcolm Rosholt saying Look at this one 6 Wong later wrote that the next morning s newspapers reported that some 1 800 people mostly women and children had been waiting at the railway station and that the IJN aviators had likely mistaken them for a troop movement 12 The Shanghai papers said that fewer than 300 people survived the attack 12 In October Life magazine reported about 200 dead 11 Publication editWong sent the newsreel footage on a U S Navy ship to Manila and from there the film was flown to New York City aboard a Pan American World Airways airliner 12 Beginning in mid September 1937 the newsreel was shown to movie theater audiences estimated a month later to number 50 million people in the U S and 30 million outside of the U S 11 and the still image of the crying baby was printed in Hearst Corporation newspapers and affiliates some 25 million copies 12 A further 1 75 million non Hearst newspaper copies showed the image in the U S and 4 million more people saw it as a matte reproduction in other newspapers 11 Some 25 million people saw it internationally 11 It first appeared in Life magazine on October 4 1937 at which point it was estimated that 136 million people had seen it 11 12 On the facing page in Life magazine another photograph showed the baby on a stretcher receiving medical care 11 Reaction editThe unforgettable image became one of the most influential photos to stir up anti Japanese sentiment in the United States 13 A tidal wave of sympathy poured out from America to China 14 and the image was widely reproduced to elicit donations for Chinese relief efforts 15 Catalyzed by the image the U S the United Kingdom and France protested Japanese bombing of Chinese civilians in open cities 12 16 Senator George W Norris was influenced by the image being convinced to abandon his longtime stance of isolationism and non interventionism he railed against the Japanese as disgraceful ignoble barbarous and cruel even beyond the power of language to describe 17 Americans used terms such as butchers and murderers against the Japanese Subsequent to Shanghai s surrender IJN Admiral Kōichi Shiozawa said to a reporter from The New York Times at a cocktail party I see your American newspapers have nicknamed me the Babykiller 18 The image was voted by Life readers as one of ten Pictures of the Year for 1937 5 In 1944 Wong s newsreel sequence was used within the Frank Capra film The Battle of China part of the Why We Fight series 19 Legacy editWhile in art school in the late 1940s Andy Warhol painted a version of the photograph the earliest of his many paintings based on photographs the original artwork has not been located and may be lost 20 Warhol s Disaster Series in the 1960s was a return to that format to interpretations of the highly visible works produced by photojournalists 20 In 1977 Lowell Thomas journalist and narrator for Hearst rival Movietone News set the photo s influence in America as high as two of the most iconic World War II images a French man grimacing in tears as his country s soldiers abandon France in June 1940 and Joe Rosenthal s Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima shot in February 1945 21 Wong retired to Taipei in the 1970s and died of diabetes at his home at the age of 81 on March 9 1981 22 In 2010 Wong was honored as a pioneering Asian American journalist by the Asian American Journalists Association 23 In 2000 artist and journalist Miao Xiaochun projected the famous image against a white curtain using the faintness of the projection to signify the diminution of its impact over time 24 The photograph appeared in the Time Life book 100 Photographs that Changed the World published in 2003 National Geographic included the photograph in their Concise History of the World An Illustrated Timeline in 2006 25 The searing image 26 was said by National Geographic author Michael S Sweeney to have served as the harbinger of Eastern militarism 27 Allegations of falsehood edit nbsp Another of Wong s Shanghai baby photographs was published by Look magazine in December 1937 At the time Japanese nationalists called the photograph a fake and the Japanese government put a bounty of 50 000 on Wong s head an amount equivalent to 1 060 000 in 2024 28 Wong was known to be against the Japanese invasion of China and to have leftist political sympathies and he worked for William Randolph Hearst who was famous for saying to his newsmen You furnish the pictures and I ll furnish the war in relation to the Spanish American War 28 Another of Wong s photos appeared in Look magazine on December 21 1937 showing a man bent over a child of perhaps five years of age both near the crying baby 28 The man was alleged to be Wong s assistant Taguchi who was arranging the children for best photographic effect 28 An article in The Japan Times and Mail said the man was a rescue worker who was posing the baby and the boy for the photographer 29 Wong described the man as the baby s father coming to rescue his children as the Japanese aircraft returned following the bombing 12 Japanese propagandists drew a connection between what they claimed was a falsified image and the general news accounts by U S and Chinese sources reporting on the fighting in Shanghai with the aim of discrediting all reports of Japanese atrocities 30 In 1956 Look magazine s Arthur Rothstein supported his earlier opinion that Wong borrowed the baby and staged the photograph 30 In 1975 Life magazine featured the famous photo in a picture book and wrote in the caption It has been said that this is staged but it is evident from various points that this is no more than a fabricated rumor 30 nbsp The baby on a stretcher receiving first aidIn 1999 the Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History a nationalist and denialist group founded by Fujioka Nobukatsu a former professor at Tokyo University published an article entitled Manipulation of Documentary Photos in China Fanning Flames of Hate in the USA in which Nobukatsu and Shudō Higashinakano argue that the photograph shows a man setting first one then two children on the railroad tracks for the purpose of making a pitiable sight for American viewers to ready American citizens for war against Japan 8 Nobukatsu argues that Wong added smoke to make the image more dramatic 30 but Rosholt wrote that the train station was still smoking when Wong arrived 6 Aforementioned Japanese revisionists do not deny the bombing nor that Chinese civilians were killed and wounded but claim the presentation of the photograph as a fake allows for the easy interpretation that there are further falsehoods in the historical record 30 In the article Nobukatsu and Higashinakano do not mention the additional Wong photo published in Life magazine which shows the baby crying on a medical stretcher as it is given first aid by a Chinese Boy Scout 11 30 Wong filmed more newsreels covering Japanese attacks in China including the Battle of Xuzhou in May 1938 and aerial bombings in Guangzhou in June 31 He operated under British protection but continued death threats from Japanese nationalists drove him to leave Shanghai with his family and to relocate to Hong Kong 12 See also editList of photographs considered the most importantReferences edit Van der Veen Maurits 2003 Uriel s Legacy Trafford Publishing p 262 ISBN 1 55395 462 9 Bradley James 2016 The China Mirage The Hidden History of American Disaster in Asia New York Back Bay Books Little Brown and Company pp 176 177 ISBN 9780316336178 Doherty Thomas 1999 Projections of war Hollywood American culture and World War II 2 ed Columbia University Press p 105 ISBN 0 231 11635 7 Tuchman Barbara W 1972 Stilwell and the American experience in China 1911 45 Bantam Books p 214 ISBN 0 553 14579 7 a b Dower John W 2010 Cultures of War Pearl Harbor Hiroshima 9 11 Iraq W W Norton amp Company pp 158 159 ISBN 978 0 393 06150 5 a b c d Cameron Mrs Richard Malcolm Rosholt January 21 1972 Letters to the Editors The Child Life Vol 72 no 2 Time Inc p 27 ISSN 0024 3019 a b Faber John 1978 Great news photos and the stories behind them 2 ed Courier Dover Publications pp 74 75 ISBN 0 486 23667 6 a b Nobukatsu Fujioka Higashinakano Shudō 1999 Manipulation of Documentary Photos in China Fanning Flames of Hate in the USA Exploding the Myth The Problem of Photographic Evidence Photos from The Rape of Nanking Association for Advancement of Unbiased View of History Archived from the original on 2012 08 29 Retrieved January 18 2011 a b Cinema Shanghai Shambl Time Time Inc September 13 1937 Archived from the original on September 2 2010 Camhi Leslie Film A Dragon Lady and a Quiet Cultural Warrior The New York Times January 11 2004 Retrieved on July 3 2011 a b c d e f g h The Camera Overseas 136 000 000 People See This Picture of Shanghai s South Station Life Vol 3 no 14 Time Inc October 4 1937 pp 102 103 ISSN 0024 3019 a b c d e f g h i Faber John 1960 Great moments in news photography from the historical files of the National Press Photographers Association T Nelson p 74 Roth Mitchel P 1997 Historical dictionary of war journalism Greenwood Publishing Group p 219 ISBN 0 313 29171 3 Winchester Simon 2008 Bomb book and compass Joseph Needham and the great secrets of China Viking p 49 ISBN 978 0 670 91378 7 Klein Christina 2003 Cold War orientalism Asia in the middlebrow imagination 1945 1961 University of California Press p 177 ISBN 0 520 22469 8 Goldberg Vicki 1991 The power of photography how photographs changed our lives Abbeville Press p 243 ISBN 1 55859 039 0 Paterson Thomas G Clifford John Garry Hagan Kenneth J 1999 American Foreign Relations A history since 1895 American Foreign Relations Vol 2 5 ed Houghton Mifflin p 151 ISBN 0 395 93887 2 Dong Stella 2001 Shanghai The Rise and Fall of a Decadent City HarperCollins pp 216 217 ISBN 0 06 093481 6 US National Archives 2015 03 17 Why We Fight The Battle of China retrieved 2017 10 16 a b Smith Patrick S 1986 Andy Warhol s art and films Studies in the fine arts Vol 54 2 ed UMI Research Press pp 40 125 ISBN 0 8357 1733 X Thomas Lowell 1977 So long until tomorrow from Quaker Hill to Kathmandu Morrow pp 83 86 ISBN 0 688 03236 2 Newsreel Wang succumbs at 81 Taiwan Today Government Information Office Republic of China Taiwan May 1 1981 Archived from the original on October 9 2011 Retrieved January 18 2011 Honor Roll List Pioneers past and present Asian American Journalists Association December 24 2010 Retrieved January 18 2011 Hung Wu 2008 Making history Wu Hung on contemporary art Timezone 8 Limited p 142 ISBN 978 988 99617 0 1 Kagan Neil 2006 National Geographic concise history of the world an illustrated timeline National Geographic Traveler National Geographic Books p 325 ISBN 0 7922 8364 3 Hamilton John Maxwell 1988 Red Star Over China Edgar Snow a biography Indiana University Press p 83 ISBN 0 253 31909 9 Sweeney Michael S 2002 From the front the story of war featuring correspondents chronicles National Geographic p 148 ISBN 0 7922 6919 5 a b c d French Paul 2009 Through the looking glass China s foreign journalists from opium wars to Mao Hong Kong University Press p 192 ISBN 978 962 209 982 1 Low Morris 2003 The Japanese Colonial Eye Science Exploration and Empire In Christopher Pinney Nicolas Peterson ed Photography s other histories Duke University Press p 117 ISBN 0 8223 3113 6 a b c d e f Morris Suzuki Tessa 2005 The past within us media memory history Nissan Institute Routledge Japanese studies Verso pp 72 75 ISBN 1 85984 513 4 Library Contents Listed Year by Year 1938 The 1930s Prelude to War Video Library UCLA Film and Television Archive Archived from the original on January 4 2011 Retrieved January 18 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bloody Saturday photograph amp oldid 1211312310, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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