Dayna Smith

Dayna Smith (born 1962) is an American photojournalist. She worked at The Washington Post for 21 years before going freelance. In 1999 she won World Press Photo of the Year.

Life and work

Smith was born in Minot, North Dakota in 1962.[1] She began her career at The Palm Beach Post in Florida and at The Washington Times.[1] In 1985 she joined the staff of The Washington Post, where she worked for 21 years as a photographer, assignment editor and picture editor.[1] In 2007 she went freelance.[1]

Smith spent two weeks in Kosovo in October and November 1998 covering the Kosovo War for The Washington Post.[2] A photograph from that time "of a grieving young woman whose husband had been killed the day before"[3] won the 1999 World Press Photo of the Year.[4][5] Smith is one of only four women to have won the award since its foundation in 1955.[6]

gollark: Strategies which minimize COVID deaths in the short run wouldn't be very good if they totally collapsed the economy after a while. Especially since this is likely to stick around for a while.
gollark: The economy *does matter*, though, even in a "lives saved" sense. As someone on the interweb put it:> Damage to productivity eventually results in damage to people, since we use part of our productivity to preserve life.
gollark: Well, we could engineer humans with better DNA error correction or something, eventually.
gollark: Forever might be an overestimate, but cancer generally will probably stick around for a while as it is a complex and hard-to-cure thing.
gollark: ... maybe these are just hard problems which they're working on, rather than some kind of conspiracy?

References

  1. "Dayna Smith". www.worldpressphoto.org. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  2. "Kosovo image is photo of the year". Tampa Bay Times. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  3. "Dayna Smith Photograph". www.npr.org. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  4. Stopera, Matt. "Every World Press Photo Winner From 1955-2011". BuzzFeed. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  5. "1999 Dayna Smith WY". www.worldpressphoto.org. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
  6. Manzanaro, Sofia Sanchez (19 August 2019). "World Photography Day: How many women have won World Press Photo?". Euronews. Retrieved 2020-05-03.
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