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ACAPS Document Analysis

ACAPS Document Analysis. Author Point of View Context When and where was it created and how might this affect the meaning Audience Purpose Significance. Example of an Image and ACAPS analysis.

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ACAPS Document Analysis

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  1. ACAPSDocument Analysis • Author • Point of View • Context • When and where was it created and how might this affect the meaning • Audience • Purpose • Significance

  2. Example of an Image and ACAPS analysis Source: Theodor de Bry “The New Queen”, an engraving by made from a 16th c drawing by Jacque le Moyne, a French colonist in Florida. Who is this? In terms of politics: This tribe shows a matriarchy or matriarchal tendencies allowing females power. This Indian queen is revered and rules over this tribe. Warfare. In terms of society: This image shows hierarchy. Socially this women has higher status than other women. It also shows matriarchy in that she is a powerful woman.

  3. Source: “The Village of Secoton” by English artist John White, 1585-1586.

  4. Source: Map of the Aztec capital Tenotchtitlan published with a collection of letters from Hernan Cortes in 1524.

  5. Source: A modern aerial photograph of the ruins of Pueblo Bonita in Chaco Canyon in present-day New Mexico.

  6. Source: English artist John White portraying ten male and seven female Native Americans from an Atlantic Seaboard tribe, 1585-1586.

  7. Source: Depiction of Spanish and Native Americans, 1621.

  8. Source: Map of Native American ways of life, ca.1500.

  9. Source: Engraving by Theodor de Bry based on a 16th century painting of Florida Indians by French colonist Jacques Le Moyne .

  10. Source: An engraving of an Iroquois longhouse by a French Jesuit, seventeenth-century.

  11. Source: Columbus’s Landfall, a Spanish engraving from a pamphlet, 1493.

  12. Source: An image from the Florentine Codex created by native artists under direction of a Spanish Catholic missionary in the 16th century.

  13. Source: An image from the Florentine Codex created by native artists under direction of a Spanish Catholic missionary in the 16th century.

  14. Source: English artist John White portraying Native Americans from an Atlantic Seaboard tribe, 1585-1586.

  15. Source: Paintings by Mexican artist Andrés de Islas, 18th century. ↑ ‘mestizo’ child ↑ ‘castizo’ child ‘coyote’ child → ← ‘chino’ child

  16. Source: A banner carried by Spanish troops led by Cortes, 16th century.

  17. Source: Engraving by Dutch Protestant Theodor de Bry depicting the Spanish and Indians in Cuzco (present-day Peru) in 1532.

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