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  1. “Spike the Football”: Truth-Telling, the Press and the Bin Laden Photos.Fred Vultee - 2013 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 28 (4):241-254.
    This article looks at press interpretations of the role of images—specifically, images of national enemies in death—in constructing various duties of media truth-telling. Discourse about the need, or duty, to publish photos of the Nazi leaders hanged at Nuremberg in 1946 provides a context for examining discourse surrounding a similar decision that the White House faced after the raid that killed Osama bin Laden in May 2011. What was seen largely as a third-person effect seven decades ago is more often (...)
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  • Eye on soweto: A study of factors in news photo use.Sue O'Brien - 1993 - Journal of Mass Media Ethics 8 (2):69 – 87.
    The 1991 Pulitzer for spot news photography went to freelancer Gregory Marinovich, who documented the murder of an accused Zulu spy by African National Congress sympathizers in Soweto, South Africa. Marinovich tried, and failed, to stop the violence. Of 57 Associated Press newspapers surveyed, 24 ran either a photo of the victim being burned alive or an equally disturbing stabbing. This analysis reports that most editors who played the photos aggressively were also careful to place them in a substantive news (...)
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