Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali

I would like to thank Dr. Carena van Riper and Dr. Bill Stewart for making this research possible. When I first visited Denali National Park & Preserve (Denali) in the fall of 2018, I was humbled by what I viewed as the rugged beauty of a 6 million acre landscape unspoiled by the excesses of hum...

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Main Author: Leitschuh, Benjamin
Format: Still Image
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2142/109766
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spelling ftunivillidea:oai:www.ideals.illinois.edu:2142/109766 2023-05-15T18:48:57+02:00 Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali Leitschuh, Benjamin 2021 http://hdl.handle.net/2142/109766 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/2142/109766 Copyright 2021 Benjamin Leitschuh Denali National Park and Preserve Landscape Image Photograph 2021 ftunivillidea 2021-09-11T22:28:05Z I would like to thank Dr. Carena van Riper and Dr. Bill Stewart for making this research possible. When I first visited Denali National Park & Preserve (Denali) in the fall of 2018, I was humbled by what I viewed as the rugged beauty of a 6 million acre landscape unspoiled by the excesses of humanity. After long hours spent listening to residents in the communities around the park, I now see a landscape full of competing meanings that challenge the very idea about what Denali is, was, and will be. Many of the indigenous Athabaskan peoples that I spoke with see Denali as part of a larger landscape that has sustained a modern way of life, rooted in the subsistence use of natural resources since time immemorial. This indigenous understanding of place often conflicts with the meanings enforced by the National Park Service that view Denali as a virgin landscape, best protected by appreciating it at arm’s length. Complicating the issues, some community groups see Denali as an underdeveloped economic resource while others want to maintain the settler-colonial fantasy that views Alaska as “the last frontier”. This research seeks to shine a light on how competing meanings of place resist and complicate the hegemonic understanding of a landscape. Still Image Alaska midnight sun University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign: IDEALS (Illinois Digital Environment for Access to Learning and Scholarship)
op_collection_id ftunivillidea
language English
topic Denali National Park and Preserve
Landscape
spellingShingle Denali National Park and Preserve
Landscape
Leitschuh, Benjamin
Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
topic_facet Denali National Park and Preserve
Landscape
description I would like to thank Dr. Carena van Riper and Dr. Bill Stewart for making this research possible. When I first visited Denali National Park & Preserve (Denali) in the fall of 2018, I was humbled by what I viewed as the rugged beauty of a 6 million acre landscape unspoiled by the excesses of humanity. After long hours spent listening to residents in the communities around the park, I now see a landscape full of competing meanings that challenge the very idea about what Denali is, was, and will be. Many of the indigenous Athabaskan peoples that I spoke with see Denali as part of a larger landscape that has sustained a modern way of life, rooted in the subsistence use of natural resources since time immemorial. This indigenous understanding of place often conflicts with the meanings enforced by the National Park Service that view Denali as a virgin landscape, best protected by appreciating it at arm’s length. Complicating the issues, some community groups see Denali as an underdeveloped economic resource while others want to maintain the settler-colonial fantasy that views Alaska as “the last frontier”. This research seeks to shine a light on how competing meanings of place resist and complicate the hegemonic understanding of a landscape.
format Still Image
author Leitschuh, Benjamin
author_facet Leitschuh, Benjamin
author_sort Leitschuh, Benjamin
title Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
title_short Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
title_full Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
title_fullStr Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
title_full_unstemmed Midnight sun and wildfire haze on Denali
title_sort midnight sun and wildfire haze on denali
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/2142/109766
genre Alaska
midnight sun
genre_facet Alaska
midnight sun
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/2142/109766
op_rights Copyright 2021 Benjamin Leitschuh
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