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==Introduction== ===Ambiance Music=== <html> <link rel="stylesheet" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/bootstrap/3.3.7/css/bootstrap.min.css" integrity="sha384-BVYiiSIFeK1dGmJRAkycuHAHRg32OmUcww7on3RYdg4Va+PmSTsz/K68vbdEjh4u" crossorigin="anonymous"> <nav class="navbar navbar-default topnav" role="navigation"> <div class="container topnav"> <!-- Brand and toggle get grouped for better mobile display --> <div class="navbar-header"> <iframe src="https://embed.spotify.com/?uri=spotify:track:2374M0fQpWi3dLnB54qaLX&theme=white" width="300" height="100" frameborder="0" allowtransparency="true" ></iframe></br> </div> </div> </nav> </html> ''Scribner’s Magazine''<html><ref></html>[http://modjourn.org/render.php?view=mjp_object&id=1233672898402506], Modernist Journals<html></ref></html> (1887-1939) was the second publication published from the the New York City firm Scribner’s. Scribner’s Magazine should not be confused with Scribners Monthly that ran from 1870 to 1881. Throughout the life of the magazine many famous and now famous writers were published into the magazine, including Arthur Conan Doyle, E. W. Hornung, Rudyard Kipling, John Galsworthy, Robert Louis Stevenson, Edward Arlington Robinson, Amy Lowell, Edith Wharton, Sara Teasdale, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Scribner’s Magazine has also been known for it’s large amount of advertisements in the publication, along with the famous authors it published. Many other magazines from its time would only print a small number of advertisements, but Scribner’s went against the flow of the rest, with half to over half of the magazine consisting of purely advertisements. <br><br>Throughout issues in 1910 Theodore Roosevelt published a continuous article into the magazine, African Game Trails. In these publications TR reflects on his hunts in the plains of Africa and what he faced during these hunts. The question is what effect on the advertisements did his stories have? The answer: little to none. ==Text Mining== <html> <!-- Exported from Voyant Tools (voyant-tools.org). The iframe src attribute below uses a relative protocol to better function with both http and https sites, but if you're embedding this into a local web page (file protocol) you should add an explicit protocol (https if you're using voyant-tools.org, otherwise it depends on this server. Feel free to change the height and width values or other styling below: --> <iframe style='width: 45%; height: 600px' src='//voyant-tools.org/?view=Cirrus&corpus=9ba8f3952359b70ad532d4098d571dcc'></iframe> <!-- Exported from Voyant Tools (voyant-tools.org). The iframe src attribute below uses a relative protocol to better function with both http and https sites, but if you're embedding this into a local web page (file protocol) you should add an explicit protocol (https if you're using voyant-tools.org, otherwise it depends on this server. Feel free to change the height and width values or other styling below: --> <iframe style='width: 45%; height: 600px' src='//voyant-tools.org/?bins=5&view=Trends&corpus=9ba8f3952359b70ad532d4098d571dcc'></iframe> </html> As depicted in the two Voyant tools embedded, the most frequently occurring words are: new, magazine, and Scribner's. These three words do not explain much regarding Roosevelt's literature. Even the word "Africa", which is the major topic of Roosevelt, is quite infrequent - at a count of 63. As you can see from the Trends graph, the frequency of related words to Africa or Roosevelt is lacking. Words like "advertisements" occur much more often than any mention of Roosevelt's Africa trip. Whilst not portrayed here, the occurrence of "advertisements" is almost six times more frequent than "Africa" or "Roosevelt". There seems to be very little correlation between Roosevelt and any advertisements put in by ''Scribner's''. The only pattern to draw from this is that advertisements are quite frequent in ''Scribner's Magazine.'' <br> [http://voyant-tools.org/?corpus=9ba8f3952359b70ad532d4098d571dcc Click here to visit Voyant Tools to play around with the texts.] ==Publication Timeline== <html> <iframe src='https://cdn.knightlab.com/libs/timeline3/latest/embed/index.html?source=1ai_ZUI0FqVVcwwGtIb3dk389IZZnSa47D83dtw1g6eM&font=Default&lang=en&initial_zoom=2&height=650' width='100%' height='650' frameborder='0'></iframe> </html> ==Close Reading== "I did not molest him" -Theodore Roosevelt == The 1st One == Theodore Roosevelt is staying at the Juja Farm which lies on the edge of the Athi Plains in East Africa. On his first day of hunting, he first kills an impalla. Later, a python attacks him and he shoots it. Some people accompanying them baited a leopard to try and attack them to be shot. They accidentally anger a rhino and have to kill it for their safety. Back at the farm, they observe a peacful gazelle. ==The 2nd One== In each issue, Roosevelt's articles describe all the game he shoots that week. His usual format includes ==Conclusion== ==Sources== <HTML> <references /> <div id="slider-range-min"></div> <script> $(function() { $( "#slider-range-min" ).slider({ range: "min", value: 50, min: 0, max: 100, slide: function( event, ui ) { $( "#amount" ).val( "$" + ui.value + ",000"); $(".a, .b, .c, .d").width(ui.value + "%"); } }); $(".ui-slider-handle").text("<>"); $( "#amount" ).val( "$" + $( "#slider-range-min" ).slider( "value") + ",000"); }); </script> </HTML>
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