Recent Menu (illustration)
1 2019-10-28T11:39:21-07:00 Kristine K. Ronan 866e3f0d78e6d37c93d7b8ddc8a882dd7a5e8029 32974 1 plain 2019-10-28T11:39:21-07:00 Kristine K. Ronan 866e3f0d78e6d37c93d7b8ddc8a882dd7a5e8029This page is referenced by:
-
1
2019-10-28T11:39:10-07:00
Numak'aki Persons and Themes
22
vistag
925416
2021-05-01T05:03:28-07:00
Notes:Click a dot to show or hide its connections.
Click and hold to drag a dot or the background, to rearrange or reposition.
Scroll or pinch the background to zoom.
Also to zoom, double click the background, with the shift key to zoom out.Reload VisualizationIn this project, I argue that over the winter of 1833–34 Fort Clark and its various spaces constituted a Middle Ground space, whose practices and shared cultures were actively co-created by non-Native fur company personnel and the Native residents of the five villages of the Awatíkihu. The basis for this argument is the exchange processes that one sees repeatedly in Prince Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied’s journals (View Part 2.). This portion of the project reorganizes these journal entries around Numak'aki themes and historical persons.
The visualization above is interactive. To read about a particular concept or person, simply click on its red circle, then click on the blue “View” button that appears. You can also visit the journal and media pages linked to each concept or historical person by clicking an orange (journal) or green (media) pop-out circle, then clicking the blue “View” button that appears.
Alternatively, you can choose an entry via the alphabetized hyperlinks below, or by clicking on the blue navigation button at the bottom of the page. The adjacent backward arrows («) key will take you to the previous page in the path, while the greyed section title above each entry’s title will return you to this landing page.
Click to show help with media and navigationTo see an image file in greater detail, or to find all other citations of the file throughout the project, click an image to pull up its detailed Media page. You can then travel to other project locations through the citational hyperlinks or click the
at the top right to return to your original entry page.
Photographs of the source journals in old German, written in Wied-Neuwied’s hand, are found at the bottom of each journal page. Click on the image to operate its zoom capability.
Hyperlinks in each entry connect you to a host of other locations within the project: media files, other journal entries, or thematic and figure pages. Hover over a link and a tooltip will appear to let you know where the link will take you. Once there, a blue “Return” button at the top right will bring you back to your original page (as does the browser back button), if desired. You can also continue forward, making your own choice from the various options linked to the new page.
There are also cross references to paragraphs in the Scholarly Article. Click on the small text icon in the left margin and a pop-up note appears with the referenced text and a link to the article page (e.g. “portraiture as calumet” ).
The Table of Contents for the entire project is always available in the top left corner.
The Recent Menu displays recently visited pages, useful for retracing one's steps.
-
1
2019-10-28T11:39:16-07:00
Wied-Neuwied’s Journal Pages
5
timeline
925416
2019-11-04T05:49:33-08:00
In this project, I argue that over the winter of 1833–34 Fort Clark constituted a Middle Ground space, actively co-created between non-Native fur company personnel and the five villages of the Awatíkihu. The basis for this argument is the exchange processes that one sees repeatedly in Prince Maximilian zu Wied-Neuwied’s journals. This project section presents a portion of this exchange, as recorded by Wied-Neuwied in thirty-five journal entries involving Numak'aki chief Mató-Tópe. (View Sources.)
The timeline above allows you to navigate to any particular entry—simply click on a date, then click the hyperlinked date that appears at the top of the timeline. A single thumbnail represents the day’s exchange, though on the specific page you may find as many as five or six representative images.
Alternatively, you can read the entries in chronological order by clicking on the “Begin with . . .” blue navigation button below. The adjacent backward arrows («) will take you to the previous page in the path, while the greyed section title above each entry’s date will return you to the timeline.
Click to show help with media and navigationTo see an image file in greater detail, or to find all other citations of the file throughout the project, click an image to pull up its detailed Media page. You can then travel to other project locations through the citational hyperlinks or click the
at the top right to return to your original entry page.
Photographs of the source journals in old German, written in Wied-Neuwied’s hand, are found at the bottom of each journal page. Click on the image to operate its zoom capability.
Hyperlinks in each entry connect you to a host of other locations within the project: media files, other journal entries, or thematic and figure pages. Hover over a link and a tooltip will appear to let you know where the link will take you. Once there, a blue “Return” button at the top right will bring you back to your original page (as does the browser back button), if desired. You can also continue forward, making your own choice from the various options linked to the new page.
The Table of Contents for the entire project is always available in the top left corner.
The Recent Menu displays recently visited pages, useful for retracing one's steps.