August 20, 2025

The Arctic In The Western Imagination

 

"Arctic Spectacles: The Frozen North in Visual Culture, 1818-1875" By Russell Potter (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2007).
"Never Return!" Painting by Julius von Payer from the Austro-Hungarian North Pole Expedition.

Google Books - A History of the Arctic:

Bitter cold and constant snow. Polar bears, seals, and killer whales. Victor Frankenstein chasing his monstrous creation across icy terrain in a dogsled. The arctic calls to mind a myriad different images. Consisting of the Arctic Ocean and parts of Canada, the United States, Russia, Greenland, Finland, Norway and Sweden, the arctic possesses a unique ecosystem—temperatures average negative 29 degrees Fahrenheit in winter and rarely rise above freezing in summer—and the indigenous peoples and cultures that live in the region have had to adapt to the harsh weather conditions. As global temperatures rise, the arctic is facing an environmental crisis, with melting glaciers causing grave concern around the world. But for all the renown of this frozen region, the arctic remains far from perfectly understood. In A History of the Arctic, award-winning polar historian John McCannon provides an engaging overview of the region that spans from the Stone Age to the present. McCannon discusses polar exploration and science, nation-building, diplomacy, environmental issues, and climate change, and the role indigenous populations have played in the arctic’s story. Chronicling the history of each arctic nation, he details the many failed searches for a Northwest Passage and the territorial claims that hamper use of these waterways. He also explores the resources found in the arctic—oil, natural gas, minerals, fresh water, and fish—and describes the importance they hold as these resources are depleted elsewhere, as well as the challenges we face in extracting them. A timely assessment of current diplomatic and environmental realities, as well as the dire risks the region now faces, A History of the Arctic is a thoroughly engrossing book on the past—and future—of the top of the world.

Google Books - Arctic Spectacles:

"When every land seems already explored, the northern exploits of the Victorian age offer a distant mirror from which to regard our own time. Fascination with the Arctic was particularly strong in the mid-nineteenth century, dominating the visual culture of both Britain and America. Arctic Spectacles documents nineteenth-century visual representations of the Arctic, weaving a narrative of the major Arctic expeditions with an account of their public reception through art and mass media. At a time when every corner of the globe seemed open to the examining eye of Western science, it was the remote, mysterious, and untamable Arctic that captured public imagination. Its impact could be seen in visual media ranging from fine art to panorama, engravings, lantern slides, and photographs, as well as hybrid forms in which Inuit were "exhibited" alongside a cabinet of assorted Arctic curiosities, while Western gentlemen looked on.