Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult

The inaccessibility of the North and South Pole makes them a crucible for persistent questions of access and data visualization that characterize the information age. Arctic and Antarctic have become increasingly topical in popular cinema as well as in media arts. As representations of polar regions...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Krapp, Peter
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5
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spelling ftcdlib:qt7nz0j5p5 2023-05-15T13:39:43+02:00 Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult Krapp, Peter 2009-12-12 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5 english eng eScholarship, University of California qt7nz0j5p5 http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5 public Krapp, Peter. (2009). Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult. Digital Arts and Culture 2009. UC Irvine: Digital Arts and Culture 2009. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5 Human Factors Theory Other Film and Media Studies article 2009 ftcdlib 2016-04-02T18:46:14Z The inaccessibility of the North and South Pole makes them a crucible for persistent questions of access and data visualization that characterize the information age. Arctic and Antarctic have become increasingly topical in popular cinema as well as in media arts. As representations of polar regions grapple with the fictions that mark representations of science, they illustrate the perils and perks of polar travel in the age of digital media. This essay sets out to trace representations of the Arctic and Antarctic in media history. To this day, the attraction of South Pole and North Pole remains one of heroic detection: they have been discovered, inspired myth, literature, science, and art, yet the polar regions remain unrepresentable - there to be found and rediscovered. This is true for the kind of art history that hews to patterns of the detective novel, reconstructing from traces a grammar of objects and authorship; and it applies also to film and media art in the age of eco-tourism, where discovery remains the motive, following snow-blown trails into nothingness, even and especially after the preceding discoverers had imprinted the landscape with their names and deaths. Polar media raise complex issues of mapping cultural space from colonialism to post-industrial globalization. One trajectory of what one ought to be able to excavate as the historical logic of polar media indicates a shift, in the 19th century, from a pronounced emphasis on race to a growing concern with environmental factors, with weather, and with the global metereological consequences of melting polar ice caps in the course of the 20th and into the 21st century. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic North Pole South pole South pole University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Arctic North Pole South Pole
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
topic Human Factors
Theory
Other Film and Media Studies
spellingShingle Human Factors
Theory
Other Film and Media Studies
Krapp, Peter
Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
topic_facet Human Factors
Theory
Other Film and Media Studies
description The inaccessibility of the North and South Pole makes them a crucible for persistent questions of access and data visualization that characterize the information age. Arctic and Antarctic have become increasingly topical in popular cinema as well as in media arts. As representations of polar regions grapple with the fictions that mark representations of science, they illustrate the perils and perks of polar travel in the age of digital media. This essay sets out to trace representations of the Arctic and Antarctic in media history. To this day, the attraction of South Pole and North Pole remains one of heroic detection: they have been discovered, inspired myth, literature, science, and art, yet the polar regions remain unrepresentable - there to be found and rediscovered. This is true for the kind of art history that hews to patterns of the detective novel, reconstructing from traces a grammar of objects and authorship; and it applies also to film and media art in the age of eco-tourism, where discovery remains the motive, following snow-blown trails into nothingness, even and especially after the preceding discoverers had imprinted the landscape with their names and deaths. Polar media raise complex issues of mapping cultural space from colonialism to post-industrial globalization. One trajectory of what one ought to be able to excavate as the historical logic of polar media indicates a shift, in the 19th century, from a pronounced emphasis on race to a growing concern with environmental factors, with weather, and with the global metereological consequences of melting polar ice caps in the course of the 20th and into the 21st century.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Krapp, Peter
author_facet Krapp, Peter
author_sort Krapp, Peter
title Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
title_short Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
title_full Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
title_fullStr Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
title_full_unstemmed Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult
title_sort cold culture: polar media and the nazi occult
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2009
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
North Pole
South Pole
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
North Pole
South Pole
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
North Pole
South pole
South pole
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
North Pole
South pole
South pole
op_source Krapp, Peter. (2009). Cold Culture: Polar Media and the Nazi Occult. Digital Arts and Culture 2009. UC Irvine: Digital Arts and Culture 2009. Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/7nz0j5p5
op_relation qt7nz0j5p5
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op_rights public
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