The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature

A body of imaginative literature on the contemporary Antarctic has emerged in the last thirty years, an evolution which has definitively updated the aesthetics of literature about the continent beyond the classic explorer narrative personified in works by Ernest Shackleton, Robert Falcon Scott, Roal...

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Main Author: McNeil, Jean
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/
https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/1/McNeil_2019.pdf
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spelling ftarro:oai:arro.anglia.ac.uk:704516 2023-05-15T14:01:02+02:00 The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature McNeil, Jean 2019-01 text https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/ https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/1/McNeil_2019.pdf en eng https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/1/McNeil_2019.pdf McNeil, Jean (2019) The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature. Doctoral thesis, Anglia Ruskin University. cc_by_nc_nd_4 CC-BY-NC-ND Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2019 ftarro 2022-11-20T21:34:24Z A body of imaginative literature on the contemporary Antarctic has emerged in the last thirty years, an evolution which has definitively updated the aesthetics of literature about the continent beyond the classic explorer narrative personified in works by Ernest Shackleton, Robert Falcon Scott, Roald Amundsen, and others. Since the late 1980s, access to the continent by non-explorers and non-scientists, including artists and writers, has accelerated, and with it the corpus of contemporary imaginative writing about the Antarctic has grown. I examine the strategies of representation I employ in three published works on the Antarctic, a novel, a collection of poetry and a memoir, all of which were inspired by my year as writerin- residence with the British Antarctic Survey, and by six years of subsequent travels to both the Arctic and the Southern Ocean with BAS. The Antarctic is shown to have a complex and contradictory character: ephemeral yet dimensional, physical and metaphysical. I explore how my literary work makes use of familiar tropes of the sublime but updates them through exposure to ‘scientific’ cultures and the specific lexicon of the modern Antarctic, ultimately employing what I and the philosopher Emily Brady term the empirical sublime. I analyse my work’s exploration of the evolving relationship in philosophy between climate change, the sublime and new conceptions of humans’ relationship to the planet such as the Anthropocene and hyperobjects. A discussion of the linguistic and representation strategies of my work elicits an argument that climate change has introduced a new iteration of the sublime, which Brady has termed ‘environmental sublime’. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Arctic British Antarctic Survey Climate change Southern Ocean Anglia Ruskin University: Anglia Ruskin Research Online (ARRO) Arctic Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic Shackleton
institution Open Polar
collection Anglia Ruskin University: Anglia Ruskin Research Online (ARRO)
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language English
description A body of imaginative literature on the contemporary Antarctic has emerged in the last thirty years, an evolution which has definitively updated the aesthetics of literature about the continent beyond the classic explorer narrative personified in works by Ernest Shackleton, Robert Falcon Scott, Roald Amundsen, and others. Since the late 1980s, access to the continent by non-explorers and non-scientists, including artists and writers, has accelerated, and with it the corpus of contemporary imaginative writing about the Antarctic has grown. I examine the strategies of representation I employ in three published works on the Antarctic, a novel, a collection of poetry and a memoir, all of which were inspired by my year as writerin- residence with the British Antarctic Survey, and by six years of subsequent travels to both the Arctic and the Southern Ocean with BAS. The Antarctic is shown to have a complex and contradictory character: ephemeral yet dimensional, physical and metaphysical. I explore how my literary work makes use of familiar tropes of the sublime but updates them through exposure to ‘scientific’ cultures and the specific lexicon of the modern Antarctic, ultimately employing what I and the philosopher Emily Brady term the empirical sublime. I analyse my work’s exploration of the evolving relationship in philosophy between climate change, the sublime and new conceptions of humans’ relationship to the planet such as the Anthropocene and hyperobjects. A discussion of the linguistic and representation strategies of my work elicits an argument that climate change has introduced a new iteration of the sublime, which Brady has termed ‘environmental sublime’.
format Thesis
author McNeil, Jean
spellingShingle McNeil, Jean
The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
author_facet McNeil, Jean
author_sort McNeil, Jean
title The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
title_short The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
title_full The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
title_fullStr The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
title_full_unstemmed The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature
title_sort empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary antarctic literature
publishDate 2019
url https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/
https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/1/McNeil_2019.pdf
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Shackleton
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
Shackleton
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
British Antarctic Survey
Climate change
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
British Antarctic Survey
Climate change
Southern Ocean
op_relation https://arro.anglia.ac.uk/id/eprint/704516/1/McNeil_2019.pdf
McNeil, Jean (2019) The empir(e)ical sublime: representations of the sublime in three works of contemporary Antarctic literature. Doctoral thesis, Anglia Ruskin University.
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