The Routledge Companion To Literature And Human Rights
List of Figures
6_1 Child soldiers at a training camp in southern Somalia, February 2011. Cover image, Human Rights Watch 2012 report, “No Place for Children.” Copyright: Human Rights Watch 2012.
7_1 A Syrian refugee woman walks with her children at Zaatari Refugee Camp in Mafraq, Jordan, Saturday, September 8, 2012 (AP Photo/Mohammad Hannon).
10.1 Pages from the Formica report that Jenny Holzer enlarged as silk screens (Annex 28).
10.2 Declassified FBI interrogation notes from Guantánamo Bay that Holzer enlarged (Federal Bureau of Investigation 2003b: 4089–90).
10.3 Close up from Figure 10.2.
10.4 Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Landscape with the Fall of Icarus (c. 1558).
10.5 Fernando Botero, Abu Ghraib 57 (2005).
10.6 Fernando Botero, Abu Ghraib 56 (2005).
14.1 Austrian civilians view a display of photographs mounted in the window of a building in Linz, Austria, showing Nazi atrocities in various concentration camps. The displays were shown in all American-held districts of Austria, May 1945. Courtesy National Archives and Records Administration.
14.2 “A German girl is overcome as she walks past the exhumed bodies of some of the 800 slave workers murdered by SS guards near Namering, Germany, and laid here so that townspeople may view the work of their Nazi leaders, 05/17/1945,” Cpl. Edward Belfer. May 17, 1945. Nara #111-SC-264895. Courtesy National Archives and Records Administration.
14.3 Visitors view a photomural of corpses piled on the ground in the newly liberated Bergen-Belsen concentration camp at the “Lest We Forget” exhibition at the Library of Congress. 06/30/1945, Washington, DC, United States, Photographer: John Mueller, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
14.4 The ground crew of B-29 “Enola Gay,” Colonel Tibbets (center), based on Air Force archival photo, mid 1940s, “somewhere in the Marians Islands.” Tracing by A.A.
14.5 The Atom Bomb Cake celebration. Tracing by A.A.
15.1 Unknown photographer. Frederick Douglass (c. 1841–45). Full-plate daguerreotype. Onondaga Historical Association.
15.2 Samuel J. Miller, American (1822–1888), Frederick Douglass, 1847/52, Cased half-plate daguerreotype, 14 x 10.6 cm (5½" × 4⅛", plate) Major Acquisititions Endowment 1996.433. The Art Institute of Chicago.
17.1 Miné Okubo, Citizen 13660 (New York: Columbia University Press, 1946), p. 60.
17.2 Art Spiegelman, Maus: A Survivor’s Tale, part 1 (New York: Pantheon, 1986), p. 32.
17.3 Joe Sacco, Palestine (Seattle: Fantagraphics, 2001), p. 148.
17.4 Nakazawa Keiji, I Saw It (1982).
20.1 #NotABugSplat. 2014. Courtesy Ali Rez, Saks Afridi, Akash Goel, Insiya Syed, JR, Assam Khalid, Jamil Akhtar, and Noor Behram.