History, asked by bharatsaini274, 10 months ago

This photograph, American Troops Landing on D-Day, was taken by a war correspondent during WWII. What do you notice about this picture? How does it make you feel when you see it?

Answers

Answered by barmansantosh41
12

Answer:

That victory was a decisive leap toward defeating Hitler’s Germany and winning the Second World War. It also changed the way America’s most famous and beloved war correspondent reported what he saw. In June 1944, Ernie Pyle, a 43-year-old journalist from rural Indiana, was as ubiquitous in the everyday lives of millions of Americans as Walter Cronkite would be during the Vietnam War. What Pyle witnessed on the Normandy coast triggered a sort of journalistic conversion for him: Soon his readers — a broad section of the American public — were digesting columns that brought them more of the war’s pain, costs and losses. Before D-Day, Pyle’s dispatches from the front were full of gritty details of the troops’ daily struggles but served up with healthy doses of optimism and a reliable habit of looking away from the more horrifying aspects of war. Pyle was not a propagandist, but his columns seemed to offer the reader an unspoken agreement that they would not have to look too closely at the deaths, blood and corpses that are the reality of battle. Later, Pyle was more stark and honest.

Answered by DevendraLal
0

The images of D-day give me the chills because they show how American military paratroopers prepared to parachute on the Normandy coast the same day as the landing.

  • You can see the anxiety and tension of the conflict on their faces. And how challenging that circumstance was.
  • Soldiers in large numbers are rushing through the water in the direction of danger.
  • They are engaged in a perilous battle. A few of the combatants have submerged themselves.
  • On the frontline, tanks are also queued up. The top of the photograph is the fuzziest in terms of quality. I get a great deal of worry and terror whenever I view this image since there is cause for concern.

#SPJ2

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