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1

Fonseca de Castro, Júlia. "O testemunho de viagem: entre referências desgastadas e influência do mercado turístico." Ateliê Geográfico 10, no. 3 (February 26, 2017): 248. http://dx.doi.org/10.5216/ag.v10i3.29647.

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Resumo As narrativas de viagem convidam à leitura por estarem vinculadas a diversas áreas do conhecimento e da sensibilidade, suscitando reflexões, dentre elas, sobre a formação e a propagação de discursos de/sobre viagem. Dentro do universo da literatura de viagem, propõe-se uma leitura transversal de textos que são marcados pela valorização do testemunho. Prioritariamente entendido como prova e fragmento da verdade, o testemunho do típico narrador-viajante adquire, ao longo do tempo, um caráter de encenação. Da mesma forma, a ênfase na viagem como modo de testemunhar os lugares assume a forma de práticas superficializadas. Anunciadas como bens de consumo, as viagens são comercializadas em pacotes “estampados” com imagens-clichê, produzidas para estimular a contemplação fácil e o registro rápido durante percursos padronizados. A forte influência do mercado turístico na conformação da cultura das viagens estimula uma renovação nas tradicionais identidades do viajante, que tendem a ser inspiradas na ideia do viajante-testemunha. As anotações de viagem de Alain de Botton e Claude Lévi-Strauss auxiliam a reflexão.Palavras-chave: viagem, literatura de viagem, mercado turístico, identidade do viajante.AbstractTravel narratives are inviting for the reading because they are linked to several areas of knowledge and sensibility, and bring up reflections, among them, about the structuring and propagation of travel discourse. Inside the universe of travel literature, we propose a transversal reading of the texts that are distinguished by valorization of the testimony. Previously understood as proof and fragment of the truth, the typical traveler-narrator testimony acquires, in time, an ethos of play-acting. In the same way, the emphasis on traveling as a way to witness places takes the shape of superficialized practices. Portrayed as consumer goods, travels are sold as “colorful” packages with cliché images that boost easy admiration and quick registering throughout standard routes. The tourism trade’s strong influence in structuring travel culture boosts a renewal of the traditional traveler identities, usually inspired by the notion of travelers as witnesses. The travel notes from Alain Botton and Claude Lévi-Strauss are helpful on this reflection. Keywords: Travel, travel’s literature, tourism trade, traveler identity.RésuméLes récits de voyage nous invitent à la lecture, en raison de leur liason avec des différends domaines de la connaissance, de la sensibilité et la propagation du discours à propos des voyages. Dans l'univers de la littérature de Voyage, nous proposons une lecture croisée des textes qui mettent en valeur le témoignage du voyageur. Le témoignage type de ce narrateur-voyageur est entendu, la plupart du temps, comme une preuve et/ou morceau de vérité. Alors, au long du temps, il devient une mise en scène du voyage. De même, l'accent mis sur le voyage comme moyen d'appréhender les lieux engendre des habitudes de voyages superficiels. Les voyages, annoncées comme des biens de consommation, sont vendus en " packs " par des images clichés produites afin de stimuler la contemplation et/ou l’inscription facile et rapide dans des voies standardisées. La forte influence du marché du tourisme dans l’élaboration de la culture du voyage stimule un renouvellement des identités traditionnelles du voyageur qui ont tendance à être inspiré par ce narrateur-voyageur. Les notes de voyage de Alain de Botton et Claude Lévi- Strauss nous aideront durant notre réflexion.Mots-clés: Voyage, littérature de voyage, marché du tourisme, identité du voyageur.
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2

Hair, P. E. H. "Was Columbus' First Very Long Voyage A Voyage from Guinea?" History in Africa 22 (January 1995): 223–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3171915.

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In 1492 Columbus made a non-stop voyage, on the high seas of the Atlantic, between the Canary Islands and an uncertain island off the coast of America, a distance of some 3,100 nautical miles. But there is a strong likelihood that he had earlier traveled on a voyage which may also have been non-stop on the Atlantic high seas and yet been even longer. According to casual references, made in notes apparently either written or authorized by Columbus himself, he had, at an unstated date, seen and perhaps been within the castle of São Jorge da Mina in Guinea. Assuming for the purposes of further discussion that this interpretation of the notes is correct, he had therefore sailed to Mina (Elmina in present-day Ghana), most probably, it is generally thought, between 1482 and 1484, not long after the Portuguese founded the fort. He must have sailed in some capacity aboard a Portuguese vessel, possibly as a trader, if not as a mariner.Although not otherwise recorded, the voyage to Mina is plausible since it occurred during the period of nearly ten years in which Columbus was employed within the Portuguese sphere. Little is known of his activities in this period but it is evidenced that he worked at one stage as a trader and made voyages in the 1470s to the Madeira group, where he resided for a time. When he traveled to America his descriptions of features there were not infrequently in terms of comparisons with features of Guinea, indicating that he was to some extent informed about the latter region and suggesting, perhaps strongly, that he had visited certain parts, as I noted in an earlier paper.
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3

SIMPSON, MARCUS B., and SALLIE W. SIMPSON. "John Lawson's A new voyage to Carolina: notes on the publication history of the London (1709) edition." Archives of Natural History 35, no. 2 (October 2008): 223–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/e0260954108000363.

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John Lawson's A new voyage to Carolina, an important source document for American colonial natural history, was first printed in 1709 in A new collection of voyages and travels, a two-volume set that also contained travel books translated by John Stevens. Lawson's publishers were leaders in the book trade of early eighteenth century London, and the New voyage is typical of the resurgent popular interest in foreign travel narratives and exotic flora and fauna that began in the late 1600s. The New collection was among the earliest examples of books published in serial instalments or fascicles, a marketing strategy adopted by London booksellers to broaden the audience and increase sales. Analysis of London issues of the New voyage indicates that the 1709, 1711, 1714, and 1718 versions are simply bindings of the original, unsold sheets from the 1709 New collection edition, differing only by new title-pages, front matter, and random stop-press corrections of type-set errors. Lawson's New voyage illustrates important aspects of the British book trade during the hand press period of the early eighteenth century.
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4

de Rosnay, Jo�l. "Notes de voyage en �cosocialisme." EcoRev' N�41, no. 2 (2013): 5. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ecorev.041.0005.

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5

Labrousse, Pierre. "Ternate et Tidore. Notes de voyage." Archipel 39, no. 1 (1990): 35–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/arch.1990.2618.

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6

Tura, Laetitia, and Cédric Deguilhem. "Notes sur un voyage au Liban." Marges, no. 03 (November 15, 2004): 64–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/marges.774.

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7

Dacan, Chen. "Notes sur un voyage à Gezaoshan." Cahiers d'Extrême-Asie 4, no. 1 (1988): 167–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/asie.1988.919.

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8

ZINS, Max-Jean. "Notes de voyage dans les Caraïbes." Nouvelles FondationS 7-8, no. 3 (2007): 250. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/nf.007.0250.

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9

Hauser, Claude. "Faire mémoire du Québec et s’ouvrir à la Francophonie." Recherche 54, no. 2 (September 6, 2013): 289–304. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1018282ar.

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Auguste Viatte, professeur franco-suisse de littérature française à l’Université Laval de 1933 à 1949, pionnier de l’histoire des littératures francophones et animateur du mouvement de la France Libre à Québec durant la Seconde Guerre mondiale, découvre le Québec lors des fêtes de Noël 1932 : il relate ce premier voyage dans un récit inédit intitulé « Voyage au Canada ». Établi à Québec dès l’été 1933, il transcrit ses premières impressions après son arrivée dans quelques notes et au travers de ses correspondances. Plus de vingt ans après, de retour en Europe, Viatte entreprend pour la quatrième fois de rédiger ses mémoires, entre 1956 et 1957, sur la base des notes accumulées dans son Journal personnel et ses archives, riches en correspondances. Il intitule ses mémoires jamais publiées « Facettes d’une vie » et y consacre plusieurs longs passages à sa découverte du Québec au début des années 1930. La troisième partie de ce récit, appelé Bonheur du Canada, met en scène dans un style littéraire soigné les souvenirs des premiers voyages effectués par Viatte au Québec, et fait mémoire de sa découverte progressive de la Belle Province. Entretemps, la période de vie la plus foisonnante de l’auteur de ce récit a fait nettement évoluer sa vision de la société québécoise. C’est donc avec l’expérience d’un « retour du Québec », ponctuant une longue période d’acculturation et d’engagement dans son pays d’accueil, que Viatte revient sur ses premières découvertes et sentiments de voyageur découvrant cette terre francophone d’Amérique.
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Hazareesingh, Sudhir. "Notes de voyage dans l'archipel des gauches." Le Débat 174, no. 2 (2013): 60. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/deba.174.0060.

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11

Amoretti, Biancamaria Scarcia. "L'iran: Pays des Femmes? Notes de Voyage." Oriente Moderno 77, no. 1 (August 12, 1997): 47–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22138617-07701005.

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12

LeBlanc, Ronnie-Gilles. "Transcription et édition critique des notes de voyage de François Edme Rameau de Saint-Père, en Acadie, en 1860." Études, no. 20-21 (July 10, 2012): 81–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1010325ar.

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Durant le voyage que François Edme Rameau de Saint-Père a effectué en Acadie, en 1860, il a noté sous forme de journal ses impressions de voyage. Depuis son départ de Boston en juillet 1860, jusqu’au terme de son voyage dans le comté de Bonaventure à la fin août de la même année, Rameau de Saint-Père a noté au jour le jour les principaux événements qui ont marqué son périple en terre d’Acadie. Quoique ces notes aient fait l’objet de deux publications, la majeure partie en est restée à l’état manuscrit. Le texte présente donc ces notes manuscrites, qui ont été déposées au Centre d’études acadiennes Anselme-Chiasson au cours des années 1950 et qui ont été disponibles pour la recherche depuis les années 1960. Or, comme ces notes manuscrites ne sont pas facilement compréhensibles, c’est donc en vue de les rendre accessibles aux chercheurs qu’elles ont été transcrites. Pour en faciliter la compréhension, elles seront agrémentées de notes critiques ou d’annotations et de commentaires.
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한택수. "Écrire le voyage dans Notes d'un voyage en Corse et Colomba de Prosper Mérimée." Etudes de la Culture Francaise et de Arts en France 53, no. ll (August 2015): 587–609. http://dx.doi.org/10.21651/cfaf.2015.53..587.

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14

Bourguet, Marie-Noëlle. "Notes romaines. Le « voyage d'archive » d'Alexander von Humboldt (1805)." Études Germaniques 261, no. 1 (2011): 21. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/eger.261.0021.

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15

Becker, Colette. "Les Notes de voyage de Mérimée : un texte hybride." Littératures 51, no. 1 (2004): 129–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/litts.2004.1941.

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16

LOW, MARTYN E. Y., PETER K. L. NG, and PAUL F. CLARK. "Additional notes on the publication of the Narrative, Zoology and Notes from a Journal of Research into the Natural History of the Voyage of H.M.S. Samarang and its consequences for the nomenclature of decapod crustaceans and other taxa." Zootaxa 4809, no. 2 (July 7, 2020): 271–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4809.2.3.

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Captain Edward Belcher was instructed by the Lords of the Admiralty to conduct a Surveying Expedition of the various coasts and islands in the Eastern Seas using H.M.S. Samarang. During this voyage from 1843–1846, Assistant-Surgeon Arthur Adams, made a significant contribution to the collection of natural history specimens, and together with fellow officers J. Richards and W. Browne, he prepared numerous drawings used by Belcher to illustrate the Narrative of the voyage. Later, Adams collaborated with Adam White (an Assistant in the Zoological Branch of the British Museum) to describe the Samarang Crustacea, published jointly with Lovell Reeve on the Samarang Mollusca, edited the Zoology of the voyage of H.M.S. Samarang and was the author of Notes from a Journal of the Natural History which was published in the Narrative of the voyage by Belcher. In his Natural History, Adams provided detailed accounts on some of the crustaceans collected with formal descriptions of species new to science thereby making these names available. The history, nomenclature and validity of the crustacean species cited in this work is discussed and a list of the available names is tabulated.
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17

Manale, Margaret. "Notes de voyage : le discours comme lieu et comme technique." L Homme et la société 116, no. 2 (1995): 135–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/homso.1995.2794.

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18

Genty, Philippe. "Notes de travail - Un Voyage Entre Perception Ressenti et Interpretation." Móin-Móin: Revista de estudos sobre teatro de formas animadas 1, no. 5 (April 27, 2018): 143–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.5965/2595034701052008143.

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19

Paone, Domenico. "Les Notes d'Italie : journal de voyage ou brouillon de roman ?" Études Renaniennes 116, no. 1 (2015): 49–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/renan.2015.1631.

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20

McDermott, James. "Frobisher's 1578 voyage: early eyewitness accounts of English ships in Arctic seas." Polar Record 32, no. 183 (October 1996): 325–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247400067541.

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ABSTRACTThe three voyages to Baffin Island under the command of Martin Frobisher (1576, 1577, and 1578) constituted the first recorded European expeditions to the area. Their original aim—the discovery of a northwest route to ‘Cathay,’ the ill-understood far east—was one manifestation of a broader English attempt to challenge the commercial ascendancy of Spain and Portugal whilst avoiding political confrontation with those powers. This latter imperative made it necessary for the search to be conducted in relatively high latitudes, corollaries of which were the growth of English experience of Arctic and sub-Arctic conditions, and the development of a body of literature, both technical and popular, to record the lessons of these endeavours. Utilising the relative abundance of contemporary evidence on the events of Frobisher's 1578 voyage—the largest expedition to Baffin Island prior to the present century—this paper notes and examines the responses of English mariners to these climatic conditions.
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Coote, Jeremy. "‘African Curiosities’ from the voyage of HMS Avon, 1845–1846: historiographical notes on a forgotten collection." Journal of the History of Collections 31, no. 2 (June 14, 2018): 221–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fhy010.

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Abstract Thanks to the detailed nature of the sketches accompanying an article published in the Illustrated London News in 1846, it has proved possible recently to trace the history of some objects in the University of Oxford’s Pitt Rivers Museum to the voyage of HMS Avon (Commander Henry Mangles Denham) to the coast of West Africa in 1845–6. Drawing on archival materials that survive at the Pitt Rivers Museum, the British Museum, the National Archives, and the United Kingdom Hydrographic Office, historiographical notes are provided on the nature and content of the collection, along with an account of its post-voyage history, including its recent ‘rediscovery’.
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22

Haugen, Marius Warholm. "Traduire le Voyage comme acte politique." Revue Romane / Langue et littérature. International Journal of Romance Languages and Literatures 55, no. 2 (August 7, 2019): 191–213. http://dx.doi.org/10.1075/rro.17016.hau.

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Abstract This article studies the discourse in the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century French periodical press on the topic of translations of travel writing. It reveals that travel reviews were arenas for discussing the political and ideological value of translating travelogues into French, notably from English. In the context of the Franco-British conflicts at the turn of the century, the French press perceived translations of British travel writing as potential patriotic tools that allowed different ways of countering or subverting British global influence. Paratextual elements of translations, the translator’s prefaces and notes, appeared to be particularly important in this respect. By analysing the periodical discourse on travel book translations, the article shows how travel writing was constructed as a politically invested genre.
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23

Campbell, R. J. "The voyage of HMS Erebus and Terror to the southern and Antarctic regions 1839–1843: the journal of Sergeant William Keating Cunningham, HMS Terror." Polar Record 46, no. 2 (September 8, 2009): 180–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0032247409990064.

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Rosove (2001: 323) described James Clark Ross's Antarctic voyage as ‘one of mankind's greatest expeditions of geographical and scientific exploration’ and Captain Scott (1905 I: 22) wrote that it was ‘among the most famous and brilliant ever made.’ Ross himself published an account of the voyage (1847), which was followed by that of the surgeon on board Erebus, Robert McCormick (1884). J.E. Davis (1901), the second master of Terror wrote a long letter to his sister, and Cornelius Savage (Savage 1839–1843), the blacksmith in Erebus wrote notes for James Savage, seaman. There was also an article published by John Robertson (1843), the surgeon in Terror together with the scientific reports and papers, none of which contain a day by day account of the voyage. Indeed, apart from the first two the other accounts cover relatively short portions of the voyage. There is also a large number of modern volumes dealing with the voyage, among which Ross (1982) quotes quite extensively from the diary that is the present topic (Cunningham 1830–1843). This diary with full critical apparatus has been published in extenso by the Hakluyt Society on line and the purpose of this note is to draw this publication to the attention of readers of Polar Record.
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Lombard-Salmon, Claudine, and Ta Trong Hiêp. "De Batavia à Saigon: Notes de voyage d'un marchand chinois (1890)." Archipel 47, no. 1 (1994): 155–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/arch.1994.2973.

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25

Medway, David G. "The contribution of Thomas Pennant (1726–1798), Welsh naturalist, to the Australian ornithology of Cook's first voyage (1768–1771)." Archives of Natural History 38, no. 2 (October 2011): 278–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2011.0034.

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Thomas Pennant – Welsh traveller, antiquary, naturalist, and author – visited Joseph Banks in September 1771 shortly after Banks returned from his voyage around the world (1768–1771) with James Cook. It was almost certainly on the occasion of this visit that Pennant was given access to manuscript descriptions of various birds and other animals that had been met with on the voyage, saw the specimens Banks had brought back to England, and was given some of them. Among the Pennant papers in the National Library of Wales is a collection of descriptions in Pennant's handwriting that relate to birds met with by Banks on Cook's voyage. These descriptions may be only part of what was once a more extensive collection in that regard. Of especial interest and importance among them are those of 13 Australian landbird species. Some years later, Pennant must have noticed that John Latham, in his monumental A general synopsis of birds (1781–1785), had not described some species that Pennant possessed specimens or descriptions of, or that Latham's information about some of those he described was deficient in certain respects. Pennant communicated descriptions and notes on those birds to Latham, most notably in relation to several landbirds that had been collected in eastern Australia by Banks in the course of his voyage with Cook. It is apparent from the sources discussed in this paper that Banks took more specimens of Australian birds back to England from the first Cook voyage than has previously been realised. It is a strange quirk of history that, today, more evidence in that regard is available from Pennant, who did not go on the voyage, than from Banks who did.
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MacLaren, I. S. "Explorers' and Travelers' Narratives: A Peregrination Through Different Editions." History in Africa 30 (2003): 213–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0361541300003223.

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Researchers keen to examine the representation of native people in European accounts of exploration and travel need bring under review the mechanism by which field notes became books, and, once they were books, the multiplicity and diffusion of editions, often themselves quite different from one another. An example that illustrates well this need is British Royal Naval Captain James Cook's posthumously published account of his third voyage to the Pacific Ocean in the years 1776-80. The standard scholarly source is J.C. Beaglehole's monumental edition, The Journals of Captain James Cook on His Voyages of Discovery (1955-74), a twenty-year editing project for the Hakluyt Society, which made available for the first time Cook's own writings until his death at Kealakekua Bay, Sandwich Islands (Hawaii), on 14 February 1779, during the third voyage. However, the need for Beaglehole's project arose, according to the president of the Hakluyt Society, because the original publications differed very widely from Cook's own writings. They were “official” accounts, published by order of George III, and they performed that always interesting exercise—they “improved” on Cook's own writings. It is well known that Cook did not prepare his journals for the press: in the case of the first two voyages to the Pacific, this was his choice. In the case of the third, the choice was not his to make, he being five years deceased. How wide are those differences?In the case of Cook's description of a month-long mooring in Nootka Sound, on the west coast of Vancouver Island, do substantive differences occur between Cook's logs and journal and Bishop John Douglas' edition? Answering that question necessarily involves consulting first editions of the various published accounts.
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Parent, Frédéric, and Léon Gérin. "Journal de voyage dans l’Ouest canadien (Présentation et notes de Frédéric Parent)." Recherches sociographiques 55, no. 2 (2014): 301. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1026694ar.

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Rudaz, Gilles. "Allier les montagnes d'Asie centrale aux Alpes : notes d'un voyage au Kirghizstan." Le Globe. Revue genevoise de géographie 145, no. 1 (2005): 121–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/globe.2005.1505.

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McGrath, W. H. "Some Notes on the Navigation of 1985 Trans-Indian Ocean Canoe Voyage." Journal of Navigation 41, no. 02 (May 1988): 174–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0373463300009267.

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In mid-1985 the 20 metre outrigger canoeSarimanok, built in the Southern Philippines from tropical forest materials, sailed out of Bali, Indonesia, to follow the direct east-west Indian Ocean track which the first Austronesian settlers of Madagascar may have taken.
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Luykx, John M. "Some Notes on the Navigation of 1985 Trans-Indian Ocean Canoe Voyage." Journal of Navigation 42, no. 2 (May 1989): 309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0373463300014533.

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31

Walker, David. "Ornithological Notes of the Voyage of ‘The Fox’ in the Arctic Seas." Ibis 2, no. 2 (June 28, 2008): 165–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1860.tb06364.x.

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GROVES, ERIC W. "Archibald Menzies (1754–1842), an early botanist on the northwestern seaboard of North America, 1792–1794, with further notes on his life and work." Archives of Natural History 28, no. 1 (February 2001): 71–122. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2001.28.1.71.

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ABSTRACT: This paper includes a short biography of Menzies and an outline of the historical events on the northwest Pacific coast leading up to Vancouver's voyage. A table listing the botanical visitors to that area prior to 1792 is given followed by a résumé of the evolution of Menzies's journal. Sources used in compiling the chronology of his movements during Vancouver's voyage are then set down, ending the section with an account of Menzies's own visit, 1792–1794. His method of plant collecting is discussed along with an account of his collections and their subsequent disposal. The paper concludes with details of Menzies's later life, his connection with other botanists of the day, and an assessment of his achievements.
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PIGOTT, LOUIS J. "John White's Journal of a voyage to new South Wales (1790): comments on the natural history and the artistic origins of the plates." Archives of Natural History 27, no. 2 (June 2000): 157–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2000.27.2.157.

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This paper discusses three groups of eighteenth century watercolour drawings (two in Australia and one in the UK) which are related to the plates in John White's Journal of a voyage to new South Wales (1790). The 65 plates are then discussed individually giving identifications of the specimens depicted and notes on the natural history of each species from an historical viewpoint.
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Guarisco, Claudia. "The Apuntaciones Of Modesto de la Torre: Mexican Nationalism as Seen by a Spanish Military Officer, 1821–1822." Americas 69, no. 04 (April 2013): 509–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003161500002625.

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In the Mendel Collection at the Lilly Library at the University of Indiana, Bloomington, is an unpublished diary of over 400 pages written by a Spanish soldier during his voyage from Spain to New Spain, and his return voyage to the Iberian Peninsula, between May 30, 1821, and May 17, 1822. The document is titled Apuntaciones que en su viaje a ultramar ha tomado el oficial de infantería Modesto de la Torre (Notes Written by Infantry Officer Modesto de la Torre During His Voyage Overseas). Lieutenant De la Torre was part of the delegation that accompanied General Juan O'Donojú when he assumed the position of captain-general and chief policy officer of New Spain, the highest-ranking office in Spain's overseas territories, following the reinstatement of die Constitution of Cádiz in 1820. The diary discusses a wide variety of topics, including the defeat of the Royalist army at Puerto Cabello (Carabobo, Venezuela) and the subsequent exodus of loyalist officers and troops to Havana. The diary also presents portraits of the people, cities, villages, towns, and flora and fauna that the lieutenant saw during his journey.
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Guarisco, Claudia. "The Apuntaciones Of Modesto de la Torre: Mexican Nationalism as Seen by a Spanish Military Officer, 1821–1822." Americas 69, no. 4 (April 2013): 509–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tam.2013.0046.

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In the Mendel Collection at the Lilly Library at the University of Indiana, Bloomington, is an unpublished diary of over 400 pages written by a Spanish soldier during his voyage from Spain to New Spain, and his return voyage to the Iberian Peninsula, between May 30, 1821, and May 17, 1822. The document is titled Apuntaciones que en su viaje a ultramar ha tomado el oficial de infantería Modesto de la Torre (Notes Written by Infantry Officer Modesto de la Torre During His Voyage Overseas). Lieutenant De la Torre was part of the delegation that accompanied General Juan O'Donojú when he assumed the position of captain-general and chief policy officer of New Spain, the highest-ranking office in Spain's overseas territories, following the reinstatement of die Constitution of Cádiz in 1820. The diary discusses a wide variety of topics, including the defeat of the Royalist army at Puerto Cabello (Carabobo, Venezuela) and the subsequent exodus of loyalist officers and troops to Havana. The diary also presents portraits of the people, cities, villages, towns, and flora and fauna that the lieutenant saw during his journey.
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36

Aschieri, Elena. "Alphonse de Lamartine, Souvenirs, impressions, pensées et paysages, pendant un voyage en Orient (1832-1833), ou Notes d’un voyageur." Studi Francesi, no. 167 (LVI | II) (July 1, 2012): 334. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/studifrancesi.4100.

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37

Layard, E. L. "Notes on the Sea-birds observed during a Voyage in the Antarctic Ocean." Ibis 4, no. 2 (April 3, 2008): 97–100. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1862.tb07478.x.

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38

Rosset, Jean. "Entre la société et la forêt: voyage sur une interface (essai)." Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Forstwesen 165, no. 8 (August 1, 2014): 216–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.3188/szf.2014.0216.

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Forest and society: journey along an interface During the train journey to his work, the author looks through the windows on either side of the compartment. On one side, he sees the world of men, increasingly urban and technical, on the other, the forest. He notes that at the interface of these two worlds, the forester's work is becoming more and more complex and sensitive. He makes proposals about the scale of management of the forest, and the level at which the forester should become involved. He believes that today's generation is responsible for putting in place the framework necessary for the conservation of biodiversity, and proposes the creation of a specialised working group of the Swiss Forestry Society and a national centre of competence for this challenge. He notes the challenges for forest management and silviculture arising in connection with climate change and scarcity of energy. Finally, he concludes that because of a favourable politico-institutional context, the community of those responsible for forest institutions is morally obliged to act in an effective and far-sighted way to safeguard what has been achieved, while adapting to the evolution of our world and anticipating changes. The author concludes that the draft modification to the forest law at present being discussed by the federal parliament is a positive development, and calls on the forest community to unite in its support.
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39

Mandelbrote, Scott. "Book reviews." Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 56, no. 3 (September 22, 2002): 389–401. http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsnr.2002.0191.

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Seven book reviews in the September 2002 issue of Notes and Records : Marie Boas Hall, Henry Oldenburg. Shaping The Royal Society . Patricia Fara, Newton: the making of genius . Ahmed Zewail, Voyage through time . G.I. Brown, Invisible rays: a history of radioactivity . Brian Austin, Schonland, scientist and soldier . Nicholas Wright Gillham, A life of Sir Francis Galton: from African exploration to the birth of eugenics . Robert Hinde, Why good is good: the sources of morality .
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40

NELSON, E. CHARLES. "John White's Journal of a voyage to new South Wales (London 1790): bibliographic notes." Archives of Natural History 25, no. 1 (February 1998): 109–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.1998.25.1.109.

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Two issues of this handsome, illustrated, First Fleet book are described in detail. John White's Journal of a voyage to new South Wales has literal amendments in “A list of plates” and on p 215, and substantial textual alterations on pp 240, 255 and 256. Copies with new leaves tipped-in and with an entire gathering reprinted and replaced are reported. A simple classification of copies is not possible because of anomalies in the make-up of several copies. A copy with the title-page printed on watermarked paper dated 1798, 8 years after initial publication, is also reported. All the copies surveyed are listed and their states annotated, and a list of plates with the corresponding names of the artists who prepared the original templates is also appended.
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LAFLEUR, Gérard. "Notes sur Félix Langin dit Longin Auteur de Voyage à la Guadeloupe (1816-1822)." Bulletin de la Société d'Histoire de la Guadeloupe, no. 177 (2017): 53. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1042766ar.

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42

LUCAS, PETER. "“A most glorious country”: Charles Darwin and North Wales, especially his 1831 geological tour." Archives of Natural History 29, no. 1 (February 2002): 1–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/anh.2002.29.1.1.

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Darwin's tour with Adam Sedgwick in 1831, the last of some 14 Welsh visits before the Beagle voyage, divides into three periods: a week, mostly with Sedgwick, from 5 August; a middle period ending by 20 August, when Sedgwick left Anglesey; and a final period during which Darwin spent some days in Barmouth, reaching Shrewsbury on 29 August. His activities are well documented, for the first period, through both men's geological notes and, for the last, in the journal of the Lowe brothers (showing Darwin reaching Barmouth from Ffestiniog on 23 August and parting from Robert Lowe on 29 August). For the middle period the circumstantial evidence points to Anglesey: whether Darwin's writings show any first hand knowledge of the island needs further examination. Robert Lowe was one of Darwin's most gifted contemporaries; his „early hero-worship” enhances the conventional picture of Darwin on the eve of the voyage. After his return to North Wales in 1842, to investigate the effects of glacial action, Darwin saw the tour as illustrating the futility of observations outside of any adequate theoretical framework.
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43

SILVA, VICTOR RAFAEL LIMEIRA DA. "HISTORY OF THE “HUMAN SCIENCES” AND WALLACE’S SCIENTIFIC VOYAGE IN THE AMAZON: NOTES ON HISTORIOGRAPHICAL ABSENCES." Estudos Históricos (Rio de Janeiro) 32, no. 67 (May 2019): 549–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/s2178-14942019000200011.

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Abstract This essay analyses a particular historiographical bibliography with the aim of addressing the divergence between history and history of science. I argue that the absence of the history of the human sciences in the historiography of science expands the distance between the history of science and other disciplines of historical studies. To ponder this hypothesis, I will analyse the historiography of Alfred Russel Wallace’s scientific voyage in the Amazon (1848-1852), arguing that the omission of the ethnographic dimension of this expedition exposes important aspects to understand the nature of such dissension and its effects on the construction of the history of the human sciences.
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Herbert, Sandra. "From Charles Darwin's Portfolio: An Early Essay on South American Geology and Species." Earth Sciences History 14, no. 1 (January 1, 1995): 23–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/eshi.14.1.76570264u727jh36.

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This work is an analysis and edition of a previously unpublished essay by Charles Darwin entitled "Reflection on reading my Geological notes." The original draft of the essay appears to have been written in 1834, that is, during Darwin's voyage on H.M.S. Beagle (1831-1836). In the essay Darwin developed a theory of the geological formation of South America that included a narrative framework for the history of life on the continent. His treatment of the history of life is not yet transmutationist, but it is highly sequential.
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Benson, C. W. "A CONTRIBUTION TO THE ORNITHOLOGY OF ST. HELENA, AND OTHER NOTES FROM A SEA-VOYAGE." Ibis 92, no. 1 (April 3, 2008): 75–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1950.tb01735.x.

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46

Hutton, F. W. "Notes on the Birds seen during a Voyage from London to New Zealand in 1866." Ibis 9, no. 2 (June 28, 2008): 185–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1867.tb06426.x.

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47

Arcemisbéhère, Rémy. "Focus. Érudition, voyage et écriture : les notes de lecture de Gérard de Nerval sur l’Égypte." Genesis, no. 51 (January 10, 2021): 101–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/genesis.5692.

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48

Batshev, Maxim V. "Russian travelers to Germany in the last quarter of the XVIII – the first half of the XIX centuries: The necessary formalities and features of travels." LOCUS: people, society, cultures, meaning, no. 1, 2020 (2020): 15–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.31862/2500-2988-2020-1-15-32.

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In the article, on the basis of travel notes, letters and diaries, the particularities of the preparation of Russian travelers at the end of the 18th – first half of the 19th centuries for foreign travel are traced. The process of paperwork necessary for making a foreign voyage is shown. Two different ways to travel to Germany are shown: by land and by sea. The impressions experienced by travelers from acquaintance with the first German cities that they met during the trip are analyzed. The attention of the author is focused on the specific features of the daily life of travelers.
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Belcher, Charles F. "Notes on Birds observed in the South Pacific Ocean during a voyage from Sydney to Valparaiso." Ibis 56, no. 4 (June 28, 2008): 588–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1474-919x.1914.tb06648.x.

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50

Caminati, Luca, and Viviane Saglier. "« Seuls les marxistes aiment le passé » : le tiers-mondisme de Pier Paolo Pasolini dans le genre des appunti." Cinémas 27, no. 1 (September 25, 2017): 57–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1041108ar.

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Pasolini conçoit en 1968 un projet de film intitulé Notes pour un poème sur le tiers-monde (Appunti per un poema sul Terzo Mondo), constitué d’une série de courts et de moyens métrages en forme de « notes » mêlant fiction et documentaire. Comme d’autres expérimentations avant-gardistes de l’époque, le genre des appunti que pratique Pasolini se situe à l’intersection de différentes formes filmiques, dont le documentaire ethnographique autoréflexif, le récit de voyage expérimental et l’essai cinématographique. Pour Pasolini, aller tourner dans le tiers-monde représente un moyen d’explorer le projet politique du mouvement des pays non alignés issu de la conférence de Bandung et le désir de l’artiste engagé de trouver dans les luttes de libération un espace de changement politique radical, une révolution da farsi. La forme essayiste, ouverte, des appunti de Pasolini vise précisément à reproduire dans sa propre structure hybride l’ouverture du mouvement révolutionnaire.
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