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Analyzing the “Photographic Evidence” of the Nanking Massacre

Analyzing the “Photographic Evidence” of the Nanking Massacre

Analyzing the “Photographic Evidence” of the Nanking Massacre

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Marion Fitch photographs which were already in use in <strong>the</strong> first period Fitch Photo Fitch Photo Fitch Photo Fitch Photo Fitch Photo Fitch Photo Fitch Photo = Photo25Fitch Photo = Photo31Fitch Photo = Photo 8Fitch Photo = Photo15Fitch Photo = Photo38Fitch Photo = Photo29Fitch Photo = Photo14How she supposedly obtained <strong>the</strong>se photographs is worth investigating. Thefollowing is an excerpt from Nankin daigyakusatsu: Nihonjin e no kokuhatsu [The Rape <strong>of</strong><strong>Nanking</strong>: Accusation Against <strong>the</strong> Japanese]:The photographs printed at <strong>the</strong> infographic topping were made availablethrough <strong>the</strong> courtesy <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Alliance in Memory <strong>of</strong> Victims <strong>of</strong> <strong>the</strong> Nanjing<strong>Massacre</strong>. These are a part <strong>of</strong> 30 photographs owned by Marion Fitch in<strong>the</strong> United States. . . . Marion Fitch lived in Shanghai in 1937, but returnedto <strong>the</strong> United States to commit herself in a fund-raising campaign forChina’s war against Japan for several years <strong>the</strong>reafter. Frederick J. Tooker,her uncle who was a Christian missionary in China, entrusted with Marion144

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