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Yellowstone embodied: Truman Everts' 'Thirty-seven days of peril'

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In September 1870, explorer Truman C. Everts, a member of the Washburn-Doane expedition to the then little-known region of the Upper Valley of the Yellowstone River, became separated from the main party and found himself without his horse and supplies alone in the 'wilderness'. Everts spent 37 days struggling to effect his escape from his life-threatening predicament before being rescued by a two-man search party. The news of his separation, conjecture as to his possible fate, and reports of his subsequent rescue caused a sensation both locally and nationally and consequently earned celebrity for Everts and, crucially, for the place where the calamity occurred. Drawing on Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology and non-representational work in cultural geography which explores the relation between self and world, body and landscape, this article revisits Everts' 1871 account of his 'perilous' misadventure to consider how his encounter with Yellowstone was embodied and, through its retelling, ultimately became inscribed on the place itself.

Keywords: Yellowstone; embodiment; exploration; landscape; masculinity; phenomenology

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 1: Department of Geography, St. Cloud State University, MN, USA 2: Department of Philosophy, Minnesota State University, Moorhead, MN, USA

Publication date: 01 June 2008

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