Iconic photos of the Vietnam War era:
A semiotic analysis as a means of understanding
Angie Lovelace*
Elon University
Abstract
The Vietnam War was defined as the “first televised war,” but it has been the still photos, the single
frames, that have carved its place in history. Eddie Adams’ image of the execution of a Viet Cong member
on the streets of Saigon and Nick Ut’s photo of a little girl running naked down the street after being burned
by napalm are two examples of “iconic” photos as defined by scholars. These iconic photos have appeared
repeatedly in the media, they have been reused and repurposed by popular culture, and they appear in history books as visual representations of the war. For this study, a synthesis of previous literature on the photographs, and a semiotic analysis examined five iconic photos in order to determine the common qualities of
a photograph that catapulted these specific photos to iconic status. Results indicated the common threads
of emotional outrage, the portrayal of innocence, and the sense of powerlessness existed among the iconic
photos.
I. Introduction
Prior to the Vietnam War, censorship in war reporting was used to prevent damage to the spirits on
the home front as well as prevent the opposing side from gaining significant information.1
According to Daniel
Hallin (1986), Vietnam was the first war in which journalists were not subjected to official censorship, in large
part because the United States government did not recognize Vietnam as an official war. Americans saw the
first televised war in their living rooms, and U.S. media gave citizens more information about Vietnam than it
had in any prior conflict.2
News photographs added significantly to the impact of words in print media, contributing to the
significant role the media played in the Vietnam War.3
The Vietnam War was a turning point for photojournalism. According to Robert Elegant (1981), it was the first war in which the outcome was not determined on the
1 Daniel C. Hallin, The “Uncensored War” (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986): 127.
2 Sidney W. Head and Christopher H. Sterling, Broadcasting in America (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin Company, 1982), 537-539.
3 Ulf Hannerz, Foreign News: Exploring the World of Foreign Correspondents (Chicago: The
University of Chicago Press, 2004).
- Keywords: Iconic Photographs, Semiotic Analysis, Vietnam War, Kent State, Self-Immolation, Tet Execution,
My Lai Massacre, Accidental Napalm
Email: angie.lovelace4@gmail.com
36 — The Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications • Vol. 1, No. 1 • Winter 2010
battlefield, but rather in print.4
Brothers (1997) found that photographs of the Vietnam War “influenced public
attitudes to the hostilities.”5
Photographs are a valuable source of information in the media because, as many studies have
shown, visual images are recalled more quickly and for a longer time than words.6
Domke, Perlmuter, and
Spratt (2003) found that images have the ability to “trigger” people’s pre-existing values, cognitions, and feelings. These pre-existing ideas can reflect how an image is interpreted.7
Mendelson (2003) found that photos
are more or less significant based on the viewer’s learning styles because high visualizers are able to store
information about individual news photographs, recognize news photographs to be less complex than the written word, and find photographs more appealing than those who are not visual learners.8
Historical conditions
are also important to the understanding of a photograph.9
If people have different learning styles, and some individuals are more susceptible to remembering
and digesting visual images, how is it that certain “icon images” are claimed to be understood and recognized
by everyone? According to Hariman and Lucaites (2007), Nick Ut’s “Accidental Napalm” photograph is the defining image of the Vietnam War because “that little girl will not go away, despite many attempts at forgetting,”
and it confronts U.S citizens with the immorality of the war.10 Hariman and Lucaites (2001) defined iconic images as those that are recognized by everyone, are understood to be representations of historically significant
events, activate strong emotional responses, and are regularly reproduced across a range of media, genres,
or topics.11 Iconic photos also can motivate public action on behalf of democratic values.12 Michael Griffin
(1999) said the “great pictures” typically symbolize national valor, human courage, inconceivable inhumanity,
or senseless loss.13
Perlmutter (1998) found that iconic images are created and kept in circulation by media elites.14
Perlmutter also defined many qualities of an icon image, including celebrity, prominence, frequency, profit,
instantaneousness, transposability, frame of subjects, importance of event, metonymy, primordially and/or
cultural resonance, and striking composition. He said that an icon provokes a strong negative reaction, or
outrage. Contrary to popular beliefs, Perlmutter found that the population as a whole is not familiar with “icon
images.”15
II. Methods
4 Robert Elegant, “How to Lose a War: Reflections of a Foreign Correspondent,” Encounter 57
(1981): 73-86.
5 Caroline Brothers, War and Photography (London: Routledge, 1997): 1.
6 Joseph R. Jenkins, D.C. Neale and S.L. Deno, “Differential Memory for Picture and Word
Stimuli,” Journal of Educational Psychology 58 (1967): 303-7 and J.G. Anglin and W.H. Levie, “Role of Visual
Richness in Picture Recognition Memory,” Perceptual and Motor Skills 61 (1985): 1303-6.
7 David Domke, David Perlmutter, and Meg Spratt, “The Primes of our Times? An Examination
of the ‘Power’ of Visual Images,” Journalism 3 (2003): 131-59.
8 Andrew Mendelson, “For Whom is a Picture Worth a Thousand Words? How does the Visualizing Cognitive Style Affect Processing of News Photos?” Conference Papers – International Communication Association 2003 Annual Meeting, San Diego, CA: 1-30.
9 Wendy Kozol, Life’s America (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1994): 6.
10 Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites, No Caption Needed: Iconic Photos, Public Culture,
and Liberal Democracy (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2007): 173.
11 Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites, “Dissent and Emotional Management in a LiberalDemocratic Society: The Kent State Iconic Photography,” Rhetoric Society Quarterly (2001): 4-31.
12 Robert Hariman and John Louis Lucaites, “Public Identity and Collective Memory in U.S.
Iconic Photography: The Image of ‘Accidental Napalm’,” Critical Studies in Media Communication, Vol. 3, No.
1 (2003): 35-66.
13 Michael Griffin, “The Great War Photographs: Constructing Myths of History and Photojournalism,” in Picturing the Past: Media, History, and Photography, ed. Bonnie Brennen and Hanno Hardt (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1999), 131.
14 David D. Perlmutter. Photojournalism and Foreign Policy. (Westport: Praeger, 1998): 1-34.
15 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 1-34.
Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War Era: A Semiotic Analysis by Angela Lovelace — 37
The methods of this research will be a synthesis of the literature on the iconic photos and a semiotic
analysis of the chosen photos, searching for themes and gaining an emotional understanding of the images.
This research study will examine five iconic photos of the Vietnam War era. The photos include John Paul
Filo’s “Kent State” (1970), Malcolm Brown’s “Self-Immolation” (1963), Eddie Adams’ “Tet Execution” (1968),
Ronald Haeberle’s “My Lai Massacre” (1968), and Nick Ut’s “Accidental Napalm” (1972).16 According to
Sturken, all of these photos include depictions of horror, challenge ideological narratives, and have acquired
far greater currency than any video of the war. The photos “acquired iconic status by shocking the American
public and creating widespread disillusionment over the United States’ role in the war.”17 To gain a deeper understanding of the photos, this study will use semiotics to place the photos in a cultural context and examine
recurring patterns and meanings to fully understand the photos.
This semiotic analysis will follow the method of Mendelson and Smith (2006), first identifying the signs
in the images, then determining what the signs signify, and lastly exploring the meanings of the signs in a cultural context; in this case, the context of the Vietnam War era.18 The purpose of a semiotic analysis is to understand the meaning of the image, “which arises from understanding the social context in which the images
were produced and within the images themselves, as well as from the minds of the audience members.”19
The patterns of composition, specifically the vantage point of the photographer as well as the cultural meaning
of the subject matter must be taken into consideration.20
According to Messaris (1994), some aspects of the composition can communicate different meanings to the audience. The audience is more likely to identify with a subject that is in the foreground of a photo
rather than in the background. The more a subject is turned to the camera, the more open they are to being
understood by the viewer. And lastly, a subject taken from a high angle is considered powerless while those
taken from a low angle tend to be viewed as having more power.21
Through the method of a semiotic analysis of the five iconic photos, this study attempted to understand the common qualities that catapulted specific photos of the Vietnam War era to iconic status?
III. Findings and Analysis
Photo 1: Kent State
The Kent State Massacre occurred on May 4,
1970, when soldiers of the Ohio National Guard opened
fire on students who were protesting the Vietnam War.
Thirteen students were shot, killing four. Student photographer John Filo took a photo of a girl screaming out over
a body lying on the pavement and the photo went out on
the AP wire later that day. That photo would become an
iconic photo of the Kent State Massacre and the Vietnam
War.
According to the categories that Perlmutter
uses to define the qualities of an iconic photo, the Kent
State photo is iconic because it is has a celebrity quality,
meaning people recognize the photo, it instantaneously
achieved fame, and it shows a significant historical event.
16 These photos are defined as iconic images by Hariman and Lucaites (2007) and Sturken
(1997).
17 Marita Sturken, Tangled Memories: The Vietnam War, the AIDS Epidemic, and the Politics of
Remembering (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1997): 89-94.
18 Andrew L. Mendelson and C. Zoe Smith, “Vision of a New State: Israel as Mythologized by
Robert Capa,” Journalism Studies 7 (2006): 191.
19 Gillian Rose, Visual Methodologies (London: Sage Publications, 2001): 69.
20 Mendelson and Smith, “Vision of a New State,” 191.
21 Paul, Messaris, Visual “Literacy” Image, Mind, & Reality (Boulder, Col.: Westview Press,
1994).
38 — The Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications • Vol. 1, No. 1 • Winter 2010
The subject of the photo is not famous, and therefore does not fit into Perlmutter’s category of fame because,
as he states, only a handful of people alive today could identify the woman kneeling over the body.
22
The Kent State photo has been studied excessively by scholars, finding that much of the power of the
photo comes from the expression of outrage on the woman’s face. According to Hariman and Luciates, “The
girl’s cry is a direct demand for accountability and compensatory action.”23 The feeling on her face is powerful
not only because of its expressiveness but also because it matches the political situation represented by the
photograph.24 The woman draws attention onto herself, away from the boy who is lying in front of her, presumably dead, because of her intense emotional response. In their book No Caption Needed, Hariman and
Luciates said, “Her scream seems to be ripping out of her heart, spontaneous, uninhibited, and unanswerable—almost if she had been the one shot.”25
Hariman and Luciates also believe that the photo has become an icon for the event because the
photo is gendered. A woman is a more appropriate vessel for a public emotional response. The woman is positioned between two males, the one lying motionless on the ground and the one standing beside her, seemingly unmoved.26 Hariman and Luciates also pointed out that the Kent State girl acts as a ventriloquist for the
murdered body on the pavement.”27
One of the less than praising aspects of the photo, as Perlmutter pointed out, is that this photo is
technically poor; it violates the techniques of photography because “a fence post grows out of the woman’s
head.”28 This compositional error prevents it from falling into the striking composition category that Perlmutter
has determined a quality of an iconic photo.
Photo 1 — Semiotic Analysis
The victim in the photograph is lying face down. His hair is disheveled and he is wearing a jacket and
pants. His clothing has no identifying qualities. His face is hidden and thus his identity is hidden as well. This
anonymity of the victim creates a national interest. He could be anyone. He could be any college student—
anyone’s son, brother, or friend. The anonymity of the victim yields to national outrage and could have created a sympathy and anger on a larger scale than if his face had been clearly shown.
The girl who is crying out in anguish is the focal point of the photograph as her body is open towards
the photographer. The emotion on her face is communicated to the viewer and conveys the outrage that she
is feeling. Her arms extend out, almost as if she is reaching for something that is not there. She is expressing a loss that she cannot fully grasp onto or understand. Her body posture is similar to the posture of Mary
that is commonly represented in the Pieta. Her arms are outstretched as if she should be holding the lifeless
Jesus, who in this case is represented by the victim. This creates a maternal quality in the girl and further
strengthens the gendered quality of the photo that Hariman and Luciates have established. She also has a
white scarf around her neck, which could be a symbol of peace or neutrality, a peace that did not occur that
day.
The boy standing in the foreground is looking away, showing disinterest or confusion. His face is hidden by his long hair, which shows ambiguity and rebellion. The boy behind him, with his back to the camera
has two holes in the butt of his jeans. Again showing rebellion, this also conveys the idea of being shot or
hurt.
The fence in the photograph has been the site of controversy over the years, but the fence also raises
questions about the landscape. What was the purpose of the fence? Was it there to keep the students in and
the national guard out? It represents a barrier that should not have been crossed. The students should have
been safe on a college campus, but that barrier was broken and four were killed.
This photo communicated the anguish and frustration that the nation felt in reaction to the event that
took place at Kent State. The anguish on the face of the girl represented the emotions and internal turmoil
that the students at Kent State were protesting about the draft and the war in Vietnam. That anguish was
22 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 16.
23 Hariman and Luciates, “Dissent,” 9.
24 Hariman and Luciates, “Dissent,” 8.
25 Hariman and Luciates, No Caption Needed, 140-1.
26 Hariman and Luciates, “Dissent,” 8-9.
27 Hariman and Luciates, “Public Identity,” 56.
28 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 18.
Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War Era: A Semiotic Analysis by Angela Lovelace — 39
catapulted to a national level due to the anonymity of the victim who was gunned down by the National Guard
who should have been protecting him.
Photo 2: Self-Immolation
The “Burning Monk” photograph was taken by
Malcolm Browne on June 11, 1963, when Thich Quang
Duc sat down in a busy Saigon intersection and set fire
to himself to protest the South Vietnamese government.
A march of 300 Buddhist monks and nuns blocked all
entrances to the intersection while fellow monks poured
a combustible mixture on Thich Quang Duc. He struck
a match and was instantaneously engulfed in flames.29
This photograph was one of the first to introduce Americans to the conflict in Vietnam and “its undeniable force
transfixed the attention of the American public on the
dramatic events portrayed.”30
According to Perlmutter, this photo is one that exemplifies the emotional reactions that iconic images
incite. “Typically, the picture is annotated as one that occasioned a reaction of “shock and dismay.”31 When
he saw the photo for the first time, “President Kennedy’s reaction was undoubtedly similar to that of many others, as he was heard to exclaim ‘Jesus Christ,’ when the morning papers were delivered to him.”32
According to Hariman and Luciates, the photo indicated that the Saigon government was so powerless that it could not put out the flames as the body burned.33
Photo 2 — Semiotic Analysis
In the photograph, the flames are consuming a man and are blowing to the right in the wind. Dark,
heavy smoke is coming off of the flames and is hiding the background in the top right corner. The flames are
chaotic and look like they could not be contained, but yet they are very focused in the specific area surrounding the man.
The right side of the man burning can be seen fairly clearly. His head is shaved and he is sitting
straight up. His posture indicates that he is not scared or stressed, but that he is sitting there with patience
and purpose, letting the flames consume him. His posture shows that this is an act of suicide not an act of
murder. He is not trying to escape or resist the flames; instead he is allowing them to kill him.
To the left there is a gas can, indicating that the flames are burning on gasoline that has been poured
on the man. The gas can is an important element that helps to tell the story of the photograph. As the gas
can helps to tell the story, the car with its hood up behind the burning body adds confusion to the photo. The
background is lined with people all wearing white robes. The robes are atypical and indicate that they have a
religious, or group affiliation. The white indicates neutrality or peace. The people are looking on, observing
the act that is occurring in front of them, but doing nothing to stop it.
This was a protest photograph, but the purpose of self-immolation was lost on many Westerners.
The exact purpose of the protest might have been lost along the way, but the patience that the monk demonstrated as he experienced the agony of being burned alive communicated his desire for change. The monk
died to communicate his message, but it was Malcolm Browne’s photographs that drew international attention
on Indochina.
Photo 3: Tet Execution
The photograph that has become known as the “Tet Execution” captured the precise moment that a
Viet Cong prisoner was executed at point-blank range. Brigadier General Nguyen Ngoc Loan, chief of the
29 Lisa Skow and George Dionisopoulos, “A Struggle to Contextualize Photographic Images:
American Print Media and the ‘Burning Monk’,” Communication Quarterly Vol. 45 No. 4 (1997): 393-4.
30 Skow and Dionisopoulos, “A Struggle to Contextualize Photographic Images,” 396.
31 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 20.
32 Skow and Dionisopoulos, “A Struggle to Contextualize Photographic Images,” 396.
33 Hariman and Luciates, “Public Identity,” 56.
40 — The Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications • Vol. 1, No. 1 • Winter 2010
South Vietnamese National Police, shot the prisoner with
a small Smith & Weston detective pistol in front of AP photographer Eddie Adams, as well as NBC and ABC camera
crews. The execution was aired on television, but it was
the still photograph that captured the “decisive moment.”34
According to Sturken, this photo acquired far greater currency than the video footage of the event: The photograph
highlights the facial expressions and circulated more easily, while the video footage of the events is actually more
chaotic and horrific.35 The photo won the Pulitzer Prize for
spot news photography in 1969.
“Eddie Adams’ still photo appeared on the front
page of most major newspapers; it was to be reprinted ad infinitum in magazines and books to the present
day,” fulfilling both the instantaneous and prominence categories of an icon.36 The photo’s prominence in the
media yielded the credit of changing the course of history.37 Eddie Adams said, “Still photographs are the
most powerful weapons in the world.”38
The photo has a striking composition because it shows the two subjects with the gun in the center.
“Its simplicity is crucial—the war depicted in this photograph is man against man, not the complex war of
bombs, defoliation, and unseen enemies.”39 The photo “became famous for its depiction of the indiscriminate
brutality of the war.”40 The executioner’s businesslike manner and lack of emotion indicate that this situation is
routine.41 And the Viet Cong’s expression of the unknown creates an empathy with the viewers. Hariman and
Luciates describe the Viet Cong’s expression as one that might be seen in a dentist’s office.42
Photo 3 — Semiotic Analysis
In the photograph of the Tet Execution, the influence of the camera must be taken into account. The
executioner must have been aware of the cameras pointed at him when he chose to point his gun at the Viet
Cong prisoner. He turned his body and face away from the cameras, thus concealing his expression and the
purpose in his action. On the other hand, the face of the victim reveals the emotions of fear and anguish as
he is being shot.
The victim’s disheveled, plaid shirt is the opposite of the typical camouflage pattern of a military
uniform, which would be kept in place representing pride. The way he is dressed indicates to a casual viewer
that he is not a military party, but rather that he is a citizen who is being shot in cold blood. He received no
trial, but instead was shot at point-blank range in the deserted street. He also was not shot with a machine
gun or a rifle that a military soldier would typically carry, but a pistol, increasing the inhumanity of the act because it no longer represents a military action, but intimate hatred between two men, or in this case, a hatred
between the two sides of the conflict.
The uneven distribution of power can be seen in the arms of the two characters. The shooter’s arm
is extended out horizontally. As he clinches the trigger, the muscles in his arm are accentuated, showing the
power that his is exerting over his victim. The Viet Cong man’s arms cannot be seen; they are tied behind his
back, stripping him of his power and leaving him there with no way to fight back. He is also standing motionless, no one is holding him, but he is not trying to run away. He has accepted his fate and is not even trying to
turn his body; he is not cowering from the gun and his imminent fate.
The soldier to the left of the frame is gritting his teeth, the emotion on his face mirrors the gruesome
act that he is watching. He is wearing a helmet, which creates irony because the Viet Cong would have benefited from a helmet at this point in time, as he is being shot in the head.
34 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 35.
35 Sturken, Tangled Memories, 89-94.
36 Perlmutter, Photojournalism, 36.
37 Sturken, Tangled Memories, 93.
38 Time Magazine, July 27, 1998.
39 Sturken, Tangled Memories, 93.
40 Sturken, Tangled Memories, 93.
41 Hariman and Luciates, “Public Identity,” 56.
42 Hariman and Luciates, “Public Identity,” 56.
Iconic Photos of the Vietnam War Era: A Semiotic Analysis by Angela Lovelace — 41
This photo created an empathy for the victim and villainized the shooter. One could not understand
the situation from the photo, but could empathize with the victim and deem this action inhumane. This scenario is echoed in the lack of understanding for the two opposing sides in the Vietnam War and the misunderstanding for the need to take life during the conflict. The photo shows an inhumane act that emphasizes the
inhumanity of the Vietnam War as a whole.
Photo 4: My Lai Massacre
On March 16, 1968, the men of Charlie Company under the command of First Lieutenant William
Calley expected to find the Viet Cong. They found no
enemy soldiers, only old men, women, and children,
but they still killed them all in what would later be
referred to as the My Lai Massacre. Army photographer Ronald Haeberle accompanied the troops to
My Lai that day and turned in a few black-and-white
self-censored photographs of the infantrymen and
Vietnamese huts. However, on his personal color film
camera, he took photos of the atrocities and murders
that occurred that day.
On November 20, Haeberle gave the exclusive rights to the photos to The Cleveland Plain
Dealer and an unusually large photo of a tangle of bodies, that were clearly women and children, was printed
at the top of the front page. The photos were later reproduced in newspapers and magazines around the
world, including in the New York Post and the New York Times.43 The photo became known as “And Babies?”
and was used as evidence during the court proceedings that resulted in the conviction of Calley.
Scholars have studied the photo, and Sturken claimed that it “acquired iconic status by shocking the
American public and creating widespread disillusionment over the U.S. role in the war.”44 Sturken also said
that the photograph “depicts terror and American atrocities in intimate detail.”45 According to Goldberg, “The
‘And Babies?’ photograph got loose in the culture as an easily recognized symbol of what was wrong with
America.”46
Photo 4 — Semiotic Analysis
This photograph was taken from a high angle, portraying the subjects as powerless, emphasizing the
obvious, as they are all dead. Everyone in the photo is horizontal, a rarity as people are typically represented
vertically. The tangle of bodies creates confusion. Confusion for the viewer to visually untangle the horror
that they are looking at and also representing the confusion that the people must have experienced as they
were being gunned down.
The focal point of this photo is a baby’s rear, drawing attention to the innocent children who were
killed in the massacre. As you look at the people along the road, the composition continues down the road
where there are more bodies scattered about. When the frame cuts off the road, the viewer is only left to
wonder if there are even more bodies off in the distance.
One body is lying face up with his/her legs spread open and both hands covering the genitals. This
covering prevents the viewer from knowing whether or not the body is male or female. If one was to assume
that the body was a woman, which would help to explain why she is not wearing any pants: Was she trying
to protect herself in the last moments of life? Did she fear rape or other actions by the soldiers who were
gunning her and the other people down? All of the people in the photo are barefoot indicating that they were
powerless to run away.
In the landscape of the photo, there is a fence running along the road. The fence could have trapped
43 Vicki Goldberg, The Power of Photography: How Photographs Changed our Lives,” (New
York: Abbeville Press, 1991): 229-36.
44 Sturken, 94
45 Sturken, 93
46 Goldberg, The Power of Photography, 236.
42 — The Elon Journal of Undergraduate Research in Communications • Vol. 1, No. 1 • Winter 2010
them in, preventing them from running away. The fence also appears to be bent down, indicating that it could
have been trampled as people tried to escape. This is the only photo of the five iconic photos in this study
that was taken in color. In this photo, the color creates contrast. The green grass that borders the road is full
of life, it is the only life left in the photo as it surrounds the dead bodies on the road.
The shocking gruesome qualities of this photo were shocking to Americans when they were confronted with the atrocities of the My Lai Massacre. At first they did not believe that their soldiers would commit
such inhumane atrocities, but the photo created the evidence that forced Americans to believe. After seeing
this one photo, they were forced to conceive that this massacre might not have been the only one, simply the
only one that there was evidence of.
Ph