My Tags For This Item

To save your tags,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Review For This Item

To save your reviews,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Notes For This Item

To save your notes,
please sign in
Not a member yet?
Register now

My Saved Searches

To save your searches,
please sign in.
Not a member yet?
Register now.

"An American soldier of the Antitank Co., 34th Regiment who was killed by mortar fire."

 
Rating: Not rated yet
  Rate item
Type: Library or Collection
Grade Level: Secondary, Post-secondary
Author: Center for History and New Media/American Social History Project
Subject: Humanities
Institution Name: American Social History Project/Center for History and New Media
Collection Name: Many Pasts (CHNM/ASHP)

Abstract: Combatants in World War II possessed far greater firepower than ever before. Consequently, the incidence of death and mutilation in units actually fighting the enemy was extremely high, sometimes one in three. World War II was the first war in which combat deaths actually outnumbered fatalities from disease or accident. President Franklin D. Roosevelt's wartime government carefully controlled what information reached the American public from the battle fronts. Until September, 1943, government censors blocked the publication of all photographs showing dead American soldiers. After that, censors continued to withhold many picturessuch as this photograph taken on Leyte Island in the Philippines on October 31, 1944that did not, even in death, conform to the heroic image of the American fighting man.

Details

Specific Types of Materials: Teaching and Learning Strategies
Language: English

Conditions of Use: No License

Tags For This Item

Tags are a way to find OER by keywords added by users
This item wasn't tagged yet.

Keywords

Keywords are descriptions assigned by the provider or the OER Commons Team.