Shadow of Suribachi: Raising the Flags on Iwo Jima

Available

Product Details

Price
$114.00
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publish Date
Pages
232
Dimensions
6.58 X 9.62 X 0.92 inches | 1.23 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780275950637

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About the Author

PARKER BISHOP ALBEE, JR., is Associate Professor of History at the University of Southern Maine./e He holds a Ph.D. in history from Duke University.

KELLER CUSHING FREEMAN is a free-lance writer, editor, and former professor. She holds a Ph.D. in history from the University of Georgia.

Reviews

"A few weeks after marines unfurled Old Glory atop Mt. Suribachi, a moment immortalized in one of the most famous war photographs ever taken, Life magazine spoiled the patriotic pride by alleging that the picture was posed. It buttressed the point by publishing pictures of a prior and decidedly less dramatic flag raising. Wherever the truth lies in this controversy, researchers Albee and Freeman have dug deep to find it, and though the matter may seem a mere footnote to the costly conquest of sulfurous Iwo Jima, it is pertinent to a study of iconic imagery. The picture, taken by Joe Rosenthal, was so powerful--combining triumph and determined comradeship--that FDR ordered the six marines depicted in it to return stateside to boost a final war bond drive (but three had been killed by then). Suddenly the veracity issue erupted and has agitated cultural historians. If this detailed work doesn't end the matter by demonstrating the picture's authenticity, no study can."-Booklist
"Albee and Freeman have written an amazingly detailed minute-by-minute account of the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima in 1945. Recommended only for libraries that specialize in Marine Corps history."-Choice
"Neither a campaign nor a photographic history in the normal sense, this book is the story behind that dramatic photograph of the second flag raising and the subsequent controversy surrounding its publication and adoption as a symbol. Even today, many believe the famous photograph is of the first raising rather than the replacement of a small flag with a larger naval ensign. The authors raise important questions about the creation of American symbols. Of interest to World War II, photographic history, and popular culture collections."-Library Journal
?Albee and Freeman have written an amazingly detailed minute-by-minute account of the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima in 1945. Recommended only for libraries that specialize in Marine Corps history.?-Choice
?Neither a campaign nor a photographic history in the normal sense, this book is the story behind that dramatic photograph of the second flag raising and the subsequent controversy surrounding its publication and adoption as a symbol. Even today, many believe the famous photograph is of the first raising rather than the replacement of a small flag with a larger naval ensign. The authors raise important questions about the creation of American symbols. Of interest to World War II, photographic history, and popular culture collections.?-Library Journal
?A few weeks after marines unfurled Old Glory atop Mt. Suribachi, a moment immortalized in one of the most famous war photographs ever taken, Life magazine spoiled the patriotic pride by alleging that the picture was posed. It buttressed the point by publishing pictures of a prior and decidedly less dramatic flag raising. Wherever the truth lies in this controversy, researchers Albee and Freeman have dug deep to find it, and though the matter may seem a mere footnote to the costly conquest of sulfurous Iwo Jima, it is pertinent to a study of iconic imagery. The picture, taken by Joe Rosenthal, was so powerful--combining triumph and determined comradeship--that FDR ordered the six marines depicted in it to return stateside to boost a final war bond drive (but three had been killed by then). Suddenly the veracity issue erupted and has agitated cultural historians. If this detailed work doesn't end the matter by demonstrating the picture's authenticity, no study can.?-Booklist
"Shadow of Suribachi, by historians Parker Albee and Keller Freeman, is a research work of art by highly competent scholars. It is important as it separates myth from fact about an important event in the lives of gallant U.S. Marines."-Joe Rosenthal Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer of the Iwo Jima flag raisings