A picture is worth a thousand words.
Newspapers and photography. This was the first war were people seen the horrors of war through photos.
attitude of Canadians during the Afghanistan war
the effect was that people knew there could be people as evil as Hitler in the world and they must kill who ever is like that
many people went mad or blind
It served to take away the romance of battle and show the grim realities of war. It was the first time people, other than eyewitnesses, saw the death and destruction.
There were paintings and you asked people who had fought
The US Civil War was the US's 2nd war in which photography, in which each photo was worth a thousand words, brought the war to the public. Quite naturally, the carnage shown in those images caused many people to hope for an end to the war.
Newspapers and photography. This was the first war were people seen the horrors of war through photos.
He used photography to help people see the harsh realities of war.
attitude of Canadians during the Afghanistan war
Some popular photography hobbies that people enjoy include landscape photography, portrait photography, wildlife photography, street photography, and macro photography.
how did war effect people
The daguerreotype photograph has no effect on society today. The process was used in the 19th century and allows us to see leaders and important events (Lincoln, Civil War, etc.) as they really were. The effect of film photography and digital photography on society would be a very different question.
It is generally accepted that the US Civil War was the first major war covered by photographers. For the first time, people had photographic images of the death and destruction seen in war. The Mexican-American War was one of the first extensively covered in moving pictures, and the Vietnam War was one of the first broadcast daily into people's living rooms. The Gulf War (1991) was amongst the first war to be covered by a 24 hour news channel.
Death
Tony Vaccaro has written: 'Entering Germany' -- subject(s): Destruction and pillage, Documentary photography, Photography, Pictorial works, Reconstruction (1939-1951), War photographers, War photography, World War, 1939-1945 'Shots of War'
Many people were killed, injured and enslaved.