Buffalo Bill's Wild West and the Progressive Image of American Indians

Jason A. Heppler and Douglas Seefeldt

Topic Modeling

The basis of the project relies upon an archive of textual documents relating to William F. Cody and Show Indians in the Wild West. The majority of documents have come from the William F. Cody Digital ARchive and were analyzed with the MALLET software package.

Topic modeling uses statistical techniques to categorize individual texts and uncover categories, patterns, and topics that might not be immediately apparent. The topics here do not emerge from the editorial decisions of the researcher, but rather are uncovered by algorithmic computation. Topics here mean groups of words that are likely to appear together in the same document. The method here is similar to Franco Moretti's concept of "distant reading" from his chapter on graphs in Graphs, Maps, and Trees: Abstract Models for Literary History.

DOC :wfc.css00010.txt




Top topics in this doc (% words in doc assigned to this topic)
        (16%)men red home show major reservation returned season fighting police ...
        (14%)war paid sitting carried children performance street features paint abroad ...
        (12%)ridge pine john note agency city dear contracts ghost neb ...
        (10%)time agency fact side exposition camp tribe living bad pale ...
        (8%)bill buffalo man great passed blankets company sight called afternoon ...
        (6%)iron chief party tail mrs red morning long guests friends ...
        (6%)day people dance white told times leave special woman feather ...
        (6%)indians commissioner shows mr affairs reservation government order reservations agent ...




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