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Chris Hondros (March 14, 1970--April 20, 2011) was an American Pulitzer
Prize-nominated photojournalist. Born in New York City to Greek and
German immigrants, both survivors of World War II, he moved to
Fayetteville, North Carolina, as a child. After studying English
literature at North Carolina State University and receiving a master's
degree from Ohio University's School of Visual Communication, Hondros
returned to New York to concentrate on international reporting.
Hondros
covered most of the world's major conflicts and disasters since the
late 1990s, including work in Kosovo, Afghanistan, the West Bank, Iraq,
Liberia, Egypt, and Libya. Hondros was also a frequent lecturer and
published essayist on issues of war, and he regularly wrote for the
"Virginia Quarterly Review," "Editor & Publisher," the Digital
Journalist, and other news publications.
Hondros, a staff
photographer for Getty Images since 2000, was a two-time finalist for
the Pulitzer Prize in breaking news photography: in 2004, for his work
in Liberia, and posthumously in 2012, for his coverage of the Arab
Spring. During his career, he received dozens of awards, among them
honors from World Press Photo, the Pictures of the Year International
competition, Visa pour l'Image, and the Overseas Press Club, including
the John Faber Award for his work in Liberia and the Robert Capa Gold
Medal, war photography's highest honor, for his work covering the
conflict in Iraq.
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