«What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica

In February 1845 Sir John Franklin was given the command of a naval expedition to find a Northwest Passage in Canada and he set sail on the Erebus, with a three-year supply of provisions: when, in 1848, the expedition had not returned, Lady Jane Franklin was personally involved in the organization o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Brazzelli, Nicoletta
Format: Book Part
Language:Italian
Published: Ledizioni 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://books.openedition.org/ledizioni/10690
_version_ 1821825560047779840
author Brazzelli, Nicoletta
author_facet Brazzelli, Nicoletta
author_sort Brazzelli, Nicoletta
collection OpenEdition
container_start_page 25
description In February 1845 Sir John Franklin was given the command of a naval expedition to find a Northwest Passage in Canada and he set sail on the Erebus, with a three-year supply of provisions: when, in 1848, the expedition had not returned, Lady Jane Franklin was personally involved in the organization of several search parties. Although she never participated in any of these, she took charge of their preparation and scheduling. Finally, in 1857 she sent the Fox on a final search for survivors: three years later, Francis Leopold McClintock returned with evidence of the expedition’s unhappy fate. In this essay, the tragic loss of Sir John Franklin’s expedition in search of the Northwest Passage is investigated from the perspective of Franklin’s wife, who won significant popular celebrity through her efforts to discover the fate of her beloved husband. Jane Franklin greatly transformed the narrative discourse of Arctic exploration, both through the direct influence she exerted on the search for Franklin and through her rewriting of the language of heroism, suffering and national honour. Her correspondence with British prime ministers, Members of Parliament, Lords of the Admiralty offers a private side to a national tragedy and sheds new light on what Sir John Franklin’s disappearance meant to England and its public opinion. The analysis of Lady Franklin’s letters focuses on the combination of the (female) language of affection to promote (male) imperial views. These letters persuaded the Admiralty to persevere with the search when it would have given up, and kept Franklin’s memory and honour alive in the national imagination. The sequence of Jane’s letters also traces the progression of Lady Franklin’s growing awareness of her husband’s death and contributes to the transformation of the Arctic explorer into a heroic figure. The language of Lady Franklin’s letters is geographically precise and conveys detailed information on the Arctic, whilst also providing readers with the domestic side of the disaster. She is the ...
format Book Part
genre Arctic
artica
Northwest passage
genre_facet Arctic
artica
Northwest passage
geographic Arctic
Canada
McClintock
Northwest Passage
Soi
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
McClintock
Northwest Passage
Soi
id ftopenedition:oai:books.openedition.org:ledizioni/10690
institution Open Polar
language Italian
long_lat ENVELOPE(157.433,157.433,-80.217,-80.217)
ENVELOPE(30.704,30.704,66.481,66.481)
op_collection_id ftopenedition
op_container_end_page 49
op_doi https://doi.org/10.4000/books.ledizioni.10690
op_relation urn:doi:10.4000/books.ledizioni.10690
http://books.openedition.org/ledizioni/10690
urn:isbn:9788855262187
urn:eisbn:9788855266925
op_rights CC BY-SA 4.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-SA
publishDate 2022
publisher Ledizioni
record_format openpolar
spelling ftopenedition:oai:books.openedition.org:ledizioni/10690 2025-01-16T20:30:24+00:00 «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica Brazzelli, Nicoletta 2022-05-11 http://books.openedition.org/ledizioni/10690 it ita Ledizioni urn:doi:10.4000/books.ledizioni.10690 http://books.openedition.org/ledizioni/10690 urn:isbn:9788855262187 urn:eisbn:9788855266925 CC BY-SA 4.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC-BY-SA littérature en anglais histoire coloniale et postcoloniale rapports entre soi et l'autre rapports entre le centre et les périphéries fantasmes utopiques angoisses dystopiques letteratura in lingua inglese storia coloniale e postcoloniale rapporti fra il sé e l’altro rapporti fra il centro e le periferie fantasie utopiche inquietudini distopiche literature in English colonial and postcolonial history relations between the center and the suburbs utopian fantasies dystopian anxieties LIT004120 Literature (General) DSB info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart chapter 2022 ftopenedition https://doi.org/10.4000/books.ledizioni.10690 2022-05-15T00:28:40Z In February 1845 Sir John Franklin was given the command of a naval expedition to find a Northwest Passage in Canada and he set sail on the Erebus, with a three-year supply of provisions: when, in 1848, the expedition had not returned, Lady Jane Franklin was personally involved in the organization of several search parties. Although she never participated in any of these, she took charge of their preparation and scheduling. Finally, in 1857 she sent the Fox on a final search for survivors: three years later, Francis Leopold McClintock returned with evidence of the expedition’s unhappy fate. In this essay, the tragic loss of Sir John Franklin’s expedition in search of the Northwest Passage is investigated from the perspective of Franklin’s wife, who won significant popular celebrity through her efforts to discover the fate of her beloved husband. Jane Franklin greatly transformed the narrative discourse of Arctic exploration, both through the direct influence she exerted on the search for Franklin and through her rewriting of the language of heroism, suffering and national honour. Her correspondence with British prime ministers, Members of Parliament, Lords of the Admiralty offers a private side to a national tragedy and sheds new light on what Sir John Franklin’s disappearance meant to England and its public opinion. The analysis of Lady Franklin’s letters focuses on the combination of the (female) language of affection to promote (male) imperial views. These letters persuaded the Admiralty to persevere with the search when it would have given up, and kept Franklin’s memory and honour alive in the national imagination. The sequence of Jane’s letters also traces the progression of Lady Franklin’s growing awareness of her husband’s death and contributes to the transformation of the Arctic explorer into a heroic figure. The language of Lady Franklin’s letters is geographically precise and conveys detailed information on the Arctic, whilst also providing readers with the domestic side of the disaster. She is the ... Book Part Arctic artica Northwest passage OpenEdition Arctic Canada McClintock ENVELOPE(157.433,157.433,-80.217,-80.217) Northwest Passage Soi ENVELOPE(30.704,30.704,66.481,66.481) 25 49
spellingShingle littérature en anglais
histoire coloniale et postcoloniale
rapports entre soi et l'autre
rapports entre le centre et les périphéries
fantasmes utopiques
angoisses dystopiques
letteratura in lingua inglese
storia coloniale e postcoloniale
rapporti fra il sé e l’altro
rapporti fra il centro e le periferie
fantasie utopiche
inquietudini distopiche
literature in English
colonial and postcolonial history
relations between the center and the suburbs
utopian fantasies
dystopian anxieties
LIT004120
Literature (General)
DSB
Brazzelli, Nicoletta
«What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title_full «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title_fullStr «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title_full_unstemmed «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title_short «What the nation would not do, a woman did»: Lady Franklin e l’esplorazione artica
title_sort «what the nation would not do, a woman did»: lady franklin e l’esplorazione artica
topic littérature en anglais
histoire coloniale et postcoloniale
rapports entre soi et l'autre
rapports entre le centre et les périphéries
fantasmes utopiques
angoisses dystopiques
letteratura in lingua inglese
storia coloniale e postcoloniale
rapporti fra il sé e l’altro
rapporti fra il centro e le periferie
fantasie utopiche
inquietudini distopiche
literature in English
colonial and postcolonial history
relations between the center and the suburbs
utopian fantasies
dystopian anxieties
LIT004120
Literature (General)
DSB
topic_facet littérature en anglais
histoire coloniale et postcoloniale
rapports entre soi et l'autre
rapports entre le centre et les périphéries
fantasmes utopiques
angoisses dystopiques
letteratura in lingua inglese
storia coloniale e postcoloniale
rapporti fra il sé e l’altro
rapporti fra il centro e le periferie
fantasie utopiche
inquietudini distopiche
literature in English
colonial and postcolonial history
relations between the center and the suburbs
utopian fantasies
dystopian anxieties
LIT004120
Literature (General)
DSB
url http://books.openedition.org/ledizioni/10690