Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light

As a site at the margin of terrestrial systems, Antarctica disrupts the usual practices of visual representation. This thesis investigates, what I call, chronogeographical approaches to visual culture within the Antarctic terrain. The material and theoretical chronogeographies of vision are mapped t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yusoff, Kathryn
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of London 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/1/Yusoff_PhD.pdf
id ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:49392
record_format openpolar
spelling ftulancaster:oai:eprints.lancs.ac.uk:49392 2023-08-27T04:06:15+02:00 Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light Yusoff, Kathryn 2005 application/pdf https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/ https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/1/Yusoff_PhD.pdf en eng University of London https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/1/Yusoff_PhD.pdf Yusoff, Kathryn (2005) Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light. PhD thesis, UNSPECIFIED. Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2005 ftulancaster 2023-08-03T22:20:57Z As a site at the margin of terrestrial systems, Antarctica disrupts the usual practices of visual representation. This thesis investigates, what I call, chronogeographical approaches to visual culture within the Antarctic terrain. The material and theoretical chronogeographies of vision are mapped through the action of light, to elucidate on the shifting terrain of form - that is the Antarctic landscape. Historically, the thesis explores how the 1980s anti-mining campaign, organised by environmental groups challenged the political and visual hegemony of the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties. The campaign highlighted the feedback between the circulation of images and initiatives to protect the Antarctic landscape. Situated within this visual economy, the thesis focuses on how representation demarcates abstract and imaginative spaces for the production of the landscape - creating fugitive images of Antarctic spatialities. The thesis follows the fugitive testimony of the image through fields of knowledge, from the arrest and flow of landscape to the aesthetics of mobility. Critical art practice is considered as an interstice that highlights the conditions under which landscapes are given visibility, both cognitively and optically. A stratum of histories, mappings and sitings, structure the investigation into the transmission, materiality, and memory embedded in different media employed in the production of Antarctica. Through this sedimentation of geographies, the thesis proposes that the limits of representation may be found in Antarctica. It is argued that this shattering of commonly available visual languages can be a means to aerate our creative explorations of place. From this site, broader issues about the economy of the visual and the limits of visibility are examined. The thesis concludes that only by attending to the complex geographies of the image can the geopolitical aesthetics of place be accounted for. Thesis Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints Antarctic The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Lancaster University: Lancaster Eprints
op_collection_id ftulancaster
language English
description As a site at the margin of terrestrial systems, Antarctica disrupts the usual practices of visual representation. This thesis investigates, what I call, chronogeographical approaches to visual culture within the Antarctic terrain. The material and theoretical chronogeographies of vision are mapped through the action of light, to elucidate on the shifting terrain of form - that is the Antarctic landscape. Historically, the thesis explores how the 1980s anti-mining campaign, organised by environmental groups challenged the political and visual hegemony of the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties. The campaign highlighted the feedback between the circulation of images and initiatives to protect the Antarctic landscape. Situated within this visual economy, the thesis focuses on how representation demarcates abstract and imaginative spaces for the production of the landscape - creating fugitive images of Antarctic spatialities. The thesis follows the fugitive testimony of the image through fields of knowledge, from the arrest and flow of landscape to the aesthetics of mobility. Critical art practice is considered as an interstice that highlights the conditions under which landscapes are given visibility, both cognitively and optically. A stratum of histories, mappings and sitings, structure the investigation into the transmission, materiality, and memory embedded in different media employed in the production of Antarctica. Through this sedimentation of geographies, the thesis proposes that the limits of representation may be found in Antarctica. It is argued that this shattering of commonly available visual languages can be a means to aerate our creative explorations of place. From this site, broader issues about the economy of the visual and the limits of visibility are examined. The thesis concludes that only by attending to the complex geographies of the image can the geopolitical aesthetics of place be accounted for.
format Thesis
author Yusoff, Kathryn
spellingShingle Yusoff, Kathryn
Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
author_facet Yusoff, Kathryn
author_sort Yusoff, Kathryn
title Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
title_short Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
title_full Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
title_fullStr Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
title_full_unstemmed Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light
title_sort arresting visions:a geographical theory of antarctic light
publisher University of London
publishDate 2005
url https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/
https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/1/Yusoff_PhD.pdf
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation https://eprints.lancs.ac.uk/id/eprint/49392/1/Yusoff_PhD.pdf
Yusoff, Kathryn (2005) Arresting visions:a geographical theory of Antarctic light. PhD thesis, UNSPECIFIED.
_version_ 1775347061531607040