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Schlender 1

Wesley Schlender

Annotated Bibliography

Primary Sources:

Images:

Army Marine Headquarters. A-Bomb victim in Hiroshima. 1945, Photograph, Hiroshima Peace

Memorial Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

This image was used as part of my gallery of victims of the atomic bombings. This

showed a man who appeared to be fairly young laying in blankets.

Hayashi, Shigeo. Panorama view of Hiroshima after the bombing in 1945. 1945, Photograph,

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

I used this image for my page on the living conditions after the bombing. This image

shows how nearly nothing was left standing in result of the atomic bomb.

Kawahara, Yotsugi. Military Hospital Tents. 1945, Photograph, Hiroshima Peace Memorial

Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

I used this image on my page about the effect on the people. This image shows the

military hospital camp for survivors in Hiroshima.

Kimura, Gonichi. Young child suffering severe burns. 1945, Photograph, Hiroshima Peace

Memorial Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

This image was used as part of my gallery of victims of the atomic bombings. This shows

that children were also victims of the bombings.


Schlender 2

Onuka, Masami. Japanese soldier exposed from 1 km away from ground zero suffers burns to

most of his body. 1945, Photograph, Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, Hiroshima. 30

Jan. 2017.

This image was used as part of my gallery of victims of the atomic bombings. This photo

shows that for the people near the bombing, almost their entire body was burnt from the

intense heat.

Onuka, Masami. Thermal burns on the back of a survivor of the initial blast. 1945, Photograph,

Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

This image was used as part of my gallery of victims of the atomic bombings. This photo

really shows how graphic and painful the burns were.

Shoten, Iwanami. Crude incidence of Leukemia in A-bomb survivors in 1950-1977. 1985,

Photograph, Tokyo. 5 Feb. 2017.

This was used to show the relationship between the A-bomb survivors and Leukemia

patients.

U.S. Army HG100-109. Hiroshima in 1945. 1945, Photograph, Hiroshima Peace Memorial

Museum, Hiroshima. 30 Jan. 2017.

I used this image as my background for each title on all of my pages. The image really

shows the destruction that the bomb caused.

Video:

Kukito. A Japan atomic bomb survivor remembers the Nagasaki attack. CNBC, 26 May
Fujita,

2016,www.cnbc.com/2016/05/26/a-japan-atomic-bomb-survivor-remembers-the-nagasak

i-attack.html. 15 Feb. 2017.


Schlender 3

This video was used on my prevention page. The interview in this video shows the

perspective of someone who actually witnessed the horrors of the bombing, and it also

has some original video clips from the time.

Interview:

Morimoto, Junko. Junkos Story: Surviving Hiroshimas Atomic Bomb. by Kylie Boltin. SBS

Australia Production, 2015, http://www.sbs.com.au/hiroshima/ . 7 Feb. 2017.

This interview was used in my website by adding more detail to some of the facts. It

helped because this person was actually there when it happened and they witnessed

everything.

Secondary Sources:

Books:

Lifton, Robert Jay, and Greg Mitchell. Hiroshima in America: Fifty Years of Denial. G.P.

Putnam's Sons, 1995.

This book gave good insight on what would happen if the world had continued using

atomic warfare after Hiroshima and Nagasaki. It also talked about the lasting social

effects that these bombs had on both our country and theirs.

Websites:

Atomic Bomb Museum. Atomicbombmuseum.org, 2006,

http://atomicbombmuseum.org/1_overview.shtml. Web. 13 Jan. 2017.


Schlender 4

This website contributed to a lot of my facts used on the website. It gave me a lot of

information on the health effects, radiation, and physical devastations caused by atomic

warfare.

Kelly, Cynthia. Bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki- 1945. Atomic Heritage Foundation,

2016,

http://www.atomicheritage.org/history/bombings-hiroshima-and-nagasaki-1945

Web. 13 Jan. 2017.

This website really helped with my research because it provided the details about

the bombs and how they were made which was good background information. It

also provided the population of the cities at the time of the bombing and the

number of casualties, both deaths and injuries, for both bombings

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