Before Babylift: Female Photojournalists and Vietnamese-American ‘Orphans’ in American Print-media, 1971–1973

IF 0.5 Q3 CULTURAL STUDIES
Georgia Vesma
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

President Ford’s announcement of ‘Operation Babylift’, a plan to airlift over 2,000 Vietnamese ‘orphans’ from South Vietnam to the United States in March 1975, prompted a wave of interest in adoption of Vietnamese children by American families. This was the culmination of years of growing interest in adopting Vietnamese ‘orphans’. Contemporary newspaper reports credited television and photographs with motivating potential adopters. Adding to scholarship which explores how photographs create discourses of ‘rescue’ and ‘responsibility’ in humanitarian contexts, this article examines how arguments for transnational adoption as a solution to Vietnam’s ‘orphan problem’ developed in the years leading up to Babylift. It notes stark differences in depictions of white-Amerasian and black-Amerasian children in keeping with racial discourses of early 1970s America. The work of female journalists in Vietnam has historically been marginalized; this article redresses this, arguing that American women photographers offered a specific perspective on the ‘orphan problem’.
《在扶婴之前:1971-1973年美国平面媒体中的女摄影记者和越南裔美国“孤儿”
1975年3月,福特总统宣布将2000多名越南“孤儿”从南越空运到美国的“救婴行动”,引发了美国家庭收养越南儿童的热潮。这是多年来人们对收养越南“孤儿”越来越感兴趣的高潮。当时的报纸报道称,电视和照片激励了潜在的采用者。除了研究照片如何在人道主义背景下创造“拯救”和“责任”话语的学术研究外,本文还研究了跨国收养作为解决越南“孤儿问题”的方法的争论是如何在Babylift之前的几年里发展起来的。它指出,在对白人-美亚混血儿和黑人-美亚混血儿的描述上,与20世纪70年代初美国的种族话语保持一致,存在着明显的差异。越南女记者的工作历来被边缘化;这篇文章纠正了这个问题,认为美国女摄影师提供了一个关于“孤儿问题”的特殊视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
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