Addario, Lynsey, 1973-
Addario, Lynsey
Lynsey Addario American photojournalist
Addario, Lynsey (American photographer, 1973-)
Lynsey Addario
VIAF ID: 160868876 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/160868876
Preferred Forms
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200 _ | ‡a Addario ‡b Lynsey
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey ‡d 1973-
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey ‡d 1973-
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey ‡d 1973-
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey ‡g American photographer, 1973-
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100 1 _ ‡a Addario, Lynsey, ‡d 1973-
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100 0 _ ‡a Lynsey Addario
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100 0 _ ‡a Lynsey Addario ‡c American photojournalist
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (11)
5xx's: Related Names (1)
Works
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Ai wa senka o kakenukete : Hodo kameraman to shite onna to shite haha to shite. |
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Bagdad après la tempête |
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Bamiyan picnic, Afghanistan, April 2010 |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. After a long day hauling crates of cucumbers, Hana attends classes that are held in a tent in her settlement |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. After a strenuous day picking plums in the orchard, Hana falls asleep in her tent surrounded by other refugee friends and relatives |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Hana brushes her hair in the bedroom belonging to her brother, 14-year-old Ibrahim, and his wife, 14-year-old Khitam |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Hana (in pink) hangs out with her cousins, twins Ala'a and Wala'a, near their settlement in rural Lebanon |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Hana prepares coals for a shisha, a traditional Arabic waterpipe, for her father in the kitchen of the family's tent |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Hana rides to work at dawn with two other Syrian refugee children to pick cucumbers |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Hana starts picking plums before dawn and continues until about 2 pm |
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Bekaa Valley, Lebanon. Syrian refugees live in an informal tented settlement in the Bekaa Valley, between Zahlé and Ba'albek |
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Choejeonbang ui sigan eul jjingneun yeoja |
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Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh. Sarmin, 28, a Rohingya who has lived in Bangladesh for many years, works in the Naziratek dried fish market outside of Cox's Bazar |
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Darfur imágenes contra la impunidad : CAM, Caja Mediterráno |
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DarfurDarfur, [2008]: |
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Dit is wat ik doe : fotograferen in tijden van liefde en oorlog |
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É isto que eu faço <uma >vida de amor e guerra |
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En el instante preciso : vida de una fotógrafa en el amor y en la guerra |
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Être une femme en Arabie saoudite : reportage |
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It's what i do : a photographer's life of love and war |
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Jeder moment ist ewigkeit : Als fotojournalistin in den krisengebieten der welt |
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Kobiety są ofiarami miejsca urodzenia |
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Kyaukpyu, Myanmar. During a week of sectarian violence in 2012, Kyaw Kyaw's village was attacked by Rakhine mobs, and the mosque was destroyed. In the melee, Kyaw Kyaw was shot in the eye by police |
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Life war |
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Nikishino, Ukraine. Children in a backyard garden playing war with military clothing that remains scattered throughout Nikishino, remnants of the fighting between pro-Russian separatists and Ukrainian troops |
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Nikishino, Ukraine. Oleg Teryokhin walks through what remains of his old classroom in his former school. Oleg's home was also partially destroyed: A shell hit his bedroom and blew a hole through the roof |
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no2008008424 |
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[Photographs of events in the Middle East] |
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Photographs. Selections |
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La résistance voilée |
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Samiti Para, Bangladesh. Children collect branches and leaves for their family to use as firewood. 10-year-old Imran (not shown) climbs up to 12 trees a day. He drops branches from the treetops to his sisters, 7-year-old Shumi and 4-year-old Munni. Their father works in a shop, and their mother stays at home |
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Say Tha Mar Gyi, Myanmar. Aisha, 18, cooks in her family home in Say Tha Mar Gyi camp. Aisha is married, but her husband left her within the last year to return to his family |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. A Rohingya child reads the Koran at a madrassa in a mosque. There are very few opportunities for Rohingya children to attend school, but most children receive some education by studying the Koran at the local madrassa |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. A Rohingya man transports Bangladeshis through Cox's Bazar on a cycle rickshaw. Rickshaw-pulling is one of the few occupations that Rohingyas are allowed to perform |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. As a Rohingya in Myanmar, Hasimullah, 30, had limited access to medical treatment for the tumor on his back. Now living in Bangladesh, he has not yet been able to afford treatment |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. Fishermen work to start their boat engine as they head out to sea at sunset from Shamlapur beach, where many of the Rohingya keep their boats. In both Myanmar and Bangladesh, fishing is one of the few opportunities for Rohingya to earn money to support their families |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. Selina, 27, has three children. Her husband is a fisherman and sometimes collects wood to sell |
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Shamlapur, Bangladesh. Shahida, 26, was married to an educated village leader in Maungdaw, Myanmar, living with her two children and in-laws. One night, the military raided the village. They shot her husband, then they raped her. She fled the country, and now she lives in a refugee settlement with her three children |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. Abdul Karim (sitting in the mud) and his family look for small frogs to eat near their home in the Baw Du Pha IDP camp |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. Azumer, 40, looks after her younger sister, Sumeir, 35, who lies almost unconscious on the floor of Azumer's tent a few days after surgery |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. In the Ba Du Pha IDP camp, Sonjida Begham, 17, wears thanakha, a yellowish paste made from ground tree bark. Often used as a cosmetic, thanakha is also a sunblock and helps cool the skin |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. In the Thet Kay Pyin clinic, 22-year-old Asea Katu sits over her 16-month-old daughter, who is feverish and coughing. The Rohingya have limited medical facilities available to them if someone is ill |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. Rohingya children play at dusk in the Thae Chaung camp for internally displaced persons |
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Sittwe, Myanmar. Rohingya fishermen arrive with fresh fish at the port in the Thae Chaung IDP camp. Every morning, dozens of fishermen return from sea after having been gone for anywhere from a few hours to several days |
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Teknaf, Bangladesh. The Kutupalong camp is one of two government-run camps located near Cox's Bazar. Approximately 32,000 registered Rohingya refugees live in the two camps. Another 200,000 non-registered Rohingya refugees live in makeshift sites or among the local community |
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Tel est mon métier mémoires d'une photographe de guerre du XXIe siècle |
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To właśnie robię / Lynsey Addario. - Warszawa, 2017. |
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To właśnie robię : znana fotoreporterka o życiu między wojną i miłością |
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Ukhia settlement, Bangladesh. Munni, 8, jumps rope with her friends. They all attend a nearby community school |
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Ukhia settlement, Bangladesh. Parvine, 28, tends house in the morning, her children nearby. Her husband is a fisherman, and they own 15 laying chickens |
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Ukraine and the world at war |
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World's photojournalists document the Russian invasion |
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최전방의 시간을 찍는 여자 여성 종군기자 린지 아다리오의 사랑과 전쟁 |
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愛は戦渦を駆け抜けて : 報道カメラマンとして, 女として, 母として |
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