Sylvia Wynter in the Arctic: early modern expeditionary narratives and the construction of "man"

This article locates Martin Frobisher’s voyages to the North American Arctic in 1576, 1577 and 1578 in relation to the thought of Jamaican critic and theorist Sylvia Wynter. For Wynter, the post-Columbian settlement and colonisation of the Americas functioned as both a crucible and proving ground fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Cambridge Review of International Affairs
Main Author: Wedderburn, Alister
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/306677/
https://eprints.gla.ac.uk/306677/2/306677.pdf
Description
Summary:This article locates Martin Frobisher’s voyages to the North American Arctic in 1576, 1577 and 1578 in relation to the thought of Jamaican critic and theorist Sylvia Wynter. For Wynter, the post-Columbian settlement and colonisation of the Americas functioned as both a crucible and proving ground for a new, racialised understanding of the human, which she calls ‘Man’. Focusing on expeditionary narratives written by sailors on Frobisher’s three voyages to Baffin Island, the article treats these narratives as examples of travel writing, a genre occupying the mobile, labile threshold between history and fiction which has often mediated the comprehension of difference, hierarchy and (international) order. Focusing on these texts’ treatments of race and otherness, the article argues that the Arctic was a key site where the terms of relationality governing English interaction with the so-called ‘New World’ and its people were hesitatingly, clumsily and often violently worked out.