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The Shaved Woman of Chartres (French: La Tondue de Chartres) is a black and white photograph taken by Robert Capa in Chartres on 16 August 1944. This picture was first published in Life magazine and became iconic of the épuration sauvage (wild purge) enacted after the liberation of France and the severe punishment imposed on the French women ...
His picture The Shaved Woman of Chartres, taken on August 16, 1944, shows a woman whose head has been shaved as a punishment for collaboration with the Nazis. [ 34 ] The Picture of the Last Man to Die
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The Shaved Woman of Chartres; Sicilian Peasant Telling an American Officer Which Way the Germans Had Gone This page was last ...
The Shaved Woman of Chartres; Sonderkommando photographs; W. Winter Sunrise, Sierra Nevada, from Lone Pine, California
A woman's head is shaved as punishment for collaboration horizontale.Montélimar area, August 1944.. Horizontal collaboration (French: Collaboration horizontale, collaboration féminine or collaboration sentimentale) referred to the romantic or sexual relationship many women in France had or allegedly had with members of the German occupation forces after the Fall of France in 1940.
On the other hand, the women in the tales who do speak up are framed as wicked. Cinderella's stepsisters' language is decidedly more declarative than hers, and the woman at the center of the tale "The Lazy Spinner" is a slothful character who, to the Grimms' apparent chagrin, is "always ready with her tongue."
The Shaved Woman of Chartres; Sicilian Peasant Telling an American Officer Which Way the Germans Had Gone; Sonderkommando photographs; V. V-J Day in Times Square; W.