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El. knyga: Visual Culture and Arctic Voyages

(National University of Ireland, Galway)
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"In 1845, Sir John Franklin and his crew set out from London on the ships Terror and Erebus for the Northwest Passage that was thought to link the Atlantic and Pacific oceans via the Canadian Arctic Archipelago. When the Franklin expedition failed to return, numerous search expeditions (thirty-six in all) were sent in its wake, producing hundreds of sketches, paintings, and texts that ultimately fed into a fascination with the Arctic. Very little research has been done on the visual records of Arctic exploration during this period. This is despite a burgeoning of interest in the polar regions in general, specifically in the literary Arctic and Antarctic, and the discovery of the two Franklin ships (in 2014 and 2016). The visual informed, and continues toinform, our ideas of the polar regions in crucial ways. This book follows the depiction of the Arctic from the ship to the shore, beginning in the Northwest Passage and ending in the metropole, continually returning to the Arctic through the eyes of the little-known expedition members who took part in the search for Franklin"--

Daugiau informacijos

Uncovering a wealth of archival information, Eavan O'Dochartaigh gives fresh and surprising insight into the Victorian image of the Arctic.
List of Figures
vi
Acknowledgements x
List of Abbreviations and Nomenclature
xiv
Introduction: Witnessing the Arctic 1(19)
1 `On the Spot': Scientific and Personal Visual Records (1848-1854)
20(31)
2 `Breathing Time': On-Board Production of Illustrated Periodicals (1850-1854)
51(30)
3 `These Dread Shores': Visualising the Arctic for Readers (1850-1860)
81(33)
4 `Never to Be Forgotten': Presenting the Arctic Panorama (1850)
114(29)
5 `Power and Truth': The Authority of Lithography (1850-1855)
143(32)
6 Conclusion: Resonances
175(6)
Notes 181(51)
Bibliography 232(1)
Primary Sources 232(7)
Secondary Sources 239(17)
Index 256
Eavan O'Dochartaigh is a Government of Ireland Postdoctoral Fellow at National University of Ireland Galway. Prior to this she was a Marie Skodowska-Curie Individual Fellow at Umeå University in northern Sweden and a Government of Ireland Doctoral Scholar at National University of Ireland Galway. She has also worked as an archaeologist and archaeological illustrator in Ireland, Iceland, and the UK.