DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Phan Thi Kim Phuc
Phan Thi Kim Phuc
Napalm: Burning People Alive Apalm Was Invented at Harvard University in 1942
Forty-Two Years and the Frequent Wind: Vietnamese Refugees in America
Kim Phuc in Winnipeg for Peace Days
War, Women, Vietnam: the Mobilization of Female Images, 1954-1978
Ideological, Dystopic, and Antimythopoeic Formations of Masculinity in the Vietnam War Film Elliott Stegall
Yê´N Lê Espiritu Lan Duong Feminist Refugee Epistemology: Reading Displacement in Vietnamese and Syrian Refugee Art the Sever
Vietnam War, January 2018
Forgiveness: the Most Powerful Word Hebrews 8:12 Easter Services – 2020 Forgiveness Is the Most Powerful Word… Some Picture
Chapter Eight War Dialling
Wallace House Journal
The Pennsylvania State University Schreyer Honors College
15Th Annual EARCOS Teachers' Conference 2017
Kinderen Die De Wereld Hebben Veranderd
If Old Napalm Sticks to Kids, What About New Napalm?
The Faces of Collateral Damage and Friendly Fire Are Generally Not Seen
Summers Are Busy Time for High School Athletes
El Exilio Como Inspiración Creativa: Cuatro Escritores Vietnamitas De La Diáspora
Primary Sources in Swedish and Australian History Textbooks
Top View
The Forgotten Stories on Patients Who Made History
The Right to Pain and the Limits of Testimony by Ai Binh Ho A
Unattainable Peace and Imperfect Praxis1 David R. Harrington, Ph.D.2
Download the Magazine As A
Kim's Story: the Road from Vietnam
Voices in the Shadow of Independence
Theme 2: Ideologies, Opinions & Beliefs in Europe and the United States from the Late-Nineteenth Century to the Present
Napalm Girl' Photo Is Savior, Curse for Survivor of Attack in Vietnam 40 Years Ago AP 'Napalm Girl' Photo from Vietnam War Turns 40
A Rapid Research Response to the Death of Aylan Kurdi* Visual Social Media Lab
2367 Textp Pt1.16
W. JOSEPH CAMPBELL Media Myth Alert
Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War Era: a Semiotic Analysis As a Means of Understanding
THE MY LAI MASSACRE Based on True Story
1 the “Visible” Enemy: Meditations on Dehumanization, War, and The