Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896

$\textit{From Edinburgh to the Antarctic}$ by William Burn Murdoch and $\textit{The Cruise of the “Antarctic” to the South Polar Regions}$ by Henrik Bull are both travel narratives that detail the authors’ experiences on board Antarctic whaling vessels in the late nineteenth century. In Europe and A...

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Main Author: Evans Rayward, Bronte
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.78719
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331272
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spelling ftdatacite:10.17863/cam.78719 2023-05-15T13:33:30+02:00 Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896 Evans Rayward, Bronte 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.78719 https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331272 en eng Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository All Rights Reserved https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/ Antarctic Antarctica Expedition narratives Whaling 19th century Intertextuality article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle Thesis 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.78719 2022-02-08T16:21:50Z $\textit{From Edinburgh to the Antarctic}$ by William Burn Murdoch and $\textit{The Cruise of the “Antarctic” to the South Polar Regions}$ by Henrik Bull are both travel narratives that detail the authors’ experiences on board Antarctic whaling vessels in the late nineteenth century. In Europe and Australia, the 1890s saw growing scientific and commercial interest in Antarctica. The period examined in this dissertation begins in 1892, when the whaling ship $\textit{Balaena}$ steamed from Dundee, and concludes with the publication of Bull’s narrative $\textit{The Cruise}$ in 1896. It examines how Burn Murdoch and Bull used intertextual references in their narratives to situate themselves on board their expeditions and within their wider respective expeditionary social networks. $\textit{From Edinburgh}$ and $\textit{The Cruise}$ show the contingencies of each expedition’s context and the ‘imperial forces’ that were significant to the development of Antarctic exploration in the late nineteenth century. The first study examines William Burn Murdoch’s account of the Dundee Sealing and Whaling Expedition titled $\textit{From Edinburgh to the Antarctic}$. I argue that Burn Murdoch represented himself in the narrative as a ‘man of science’ to demarcate his position on board the ship $\textit{Balaena}$. His narrative also speaks to the scientific community in Edinburgh that played roles in both securing his place on the expedition and educating him about Antarctica. The second case study analyses the relationship between $\textit{The Cruise of the “Antarctic”}$ and Sir James Clark Ross’s narrative of his expedition to Antarctica. It describes how Bull represented the temporal relationship between his own voyage to Antarctica and Ross’s. Bull’s flexible representation of the half a century of time that elapsed between Ross’s expedition and his own in $\textit{The Cruise}$ was fundamental to establishing the credibility of his narrative. I argue that this temporal representation also allowed him to justify his decision making as expedition leader to his expedition community. This is a cultural historical analysis of two published Antarctic narratives that draws on recent scholarship about the mobility of scientific knowledge, anthropological concerns with the traditions and cultures of expeditions and literary scholarship on Antarctic texts and imaginaries. This dissertation shows the potential of approaching Antarctic expedition narratives as historical, as well as literary, sources. Research on the Arctic, and the second half of the twentieth century in Antarctica, has illuminated the importance of communities and individuals to the knowledge produced about these regions. The narratives analysed in this dissertation were implicated in and contributed to the function of expeditionary social networks in the late nineteenth century. Understanding the complexity and nuance of past Antarctic narratives is vital to analysing contemporary imaginaries and stories of the Antarctic continent. Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Antarctic The Antarctic Dundee ENVELOPE(-55.966,-55.966,-63.483,-63.483) Murdoch ENVELOPE(-44.666,-44.666,-60.783,-60.783)
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Antarctic
Antarctica
Expedition narratives
Whaling
19th century
Intertextuality
spellingShingle Antarctic
Antarctica
Expedition narratives
Whaling
19th century
Intertextuality
Evans Rayward, Bronte
Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
topic_facet Antarctic
Antarctica
Expedition narratives
Whaling
19th century
Intertextuality
description $\textit{From Edinburgh to the Antarctic}$ by William Burn Murdoch and $\textit{The Cruise of the “Antarctic” to the South Polar Regions}$ by Henrik Bull are both travel narratives that detail the authors’ experiences on board Antarctic whaling vessels in the late nineteenth century. In Europe and Australia, the 1890s saw growing scientific and commercial interest in Antarctica. The period examined in this dissertation begins in 1892, when the whaling ship $\textit{Balaena}$ steamed from Dundee, and concludes with the publication of Bull’s narrative $\textit{The Cruise}$ in 1896. It examines how Burn Murdoch and Bull used intertextual references in their narratives to situate themselves on board their expeditions and within their wider respective expeditionary social networks. $\textit{From Edinburgh}$ and $\textit{The Cruise}$ show the contingencies of each expedition’s context and the ‘imperial forces’ that were significant to the development of Antarctic exploration in the late nineteenth century. The first study examines William Burn Murdoch’s account of the Dundee Sealing and Whaling Expedition titled $\textit{From Edinburgh to the Antarctic}$. I argue that Burn Murdoch represented himself in the narrative as a ‘man of science’ to demarcate his position on board the ship $\textit{Balaena}$. His narrative also speaks to the scientific community in Edinburgh that played roles in both securing his place on the expedition and educating him about Antarctica. The second case study analyses the relationship between $\textit{The Cruise of the “Antarctic”}$ and Sir James Clark Ross’s narrative of his expedition to Antarctica. It describes how Bull represented the temporal relationship between his own voyage to Antarctica and Ross’s. Bull’s flexible representation of the half a century of time that elapsed between Ross’s expedition and his own in $\textit{The Cruise}$ was fundamental to establishing the credibility of his narrative. I argue that this temporal representation also allowed him to justify his decision making as expedition leader to his expedition community. This is a cultural historical analysis of two published Antarctic narratives that draws on recent scholarship about the mobility of scientific knowledge, anthropological concerns with the traditions and cultures of expeditions and literary scholarship on Antarctic texts and imaginaries. This dissertation shows the potential of approaching Antarctic expedition narratives as historical, as well as literary, sources. Research on the Arctic, and the second half of the twentieth century in Antarctica, has illuminated the importance of communities and individuals to the knowledge produced about these regions. The narratives analysed in this dissertation were implicated in and contributed to the function of expeditionary social networks in the late nineteenth century. Understanding the complexity and nuance of past Antarctic narratives is vital to analysing contemporary imaginaries and stories of the Antarctic continent.
format Text
author Evans Rayward, Bronte
author_facet Evans Rayward, Bronte
author_sort Evans Rayward, Bronte
title Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
title_short Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
title_full Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
title_fullStr Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
title_full_unstemmed Situating ‘Books of Travel’: Intertextuality in Antarctic Whaling Narratives 1892-1896
title_sort situating ‘books of travel’: intertextuality in antarctic whaling narratives 1892-1896
publisher Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.17863/cam.78719
https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/331272
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.966,-55.966,-63.483,-63.483)
ENVELOPE(-44.666,-44.666,-60.783,-60.783)
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Dundee
Murdoch
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Dundee
Murdoch
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
op_rights All Rights Reserved
https://www.rioxx.net/licenses/all-rights-reserved/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.78719
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