Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland

The nineteenth century saw the golden age of British exploration of Iceland, a country that had long epitomized the inhospitable ‘North’ in the Western imagination. The interest of British travellers shifted from the scientific attitude of the early explorers, attracted by the island’s extraordinary...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: ANTINUCCI, Raffaella
Other Authors: Antinucci, Raffaella
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11367/56100
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author ANTINUCCI, Raffaella
author2 Antinucci, Raffaella
author_facet ANTINUCCI, Raffaella
author_sort ANTINUCCI, Raffaella
collection Università degli Studi di Napoli "Parthenope": CINECA IRIS
description The nineteenth century saw the golden age of British exploration of Iceland, a country that had long epitomized the inhospitable ‘North’ in the Western imagination. The interest of British travellers shifted from the scientific attitude of the early explorers, attracted by the island’s extraordinary geology and natural phenomena, to the rise of ‘saga tourism’ in the second half of the century. Iceland provided the perfect site on which British ideals of ‘northern’ values, cultural and literary heritage could be projected and renegotiated. In this context, Anthony Trollope’s travelogue of the visit he paid to the island in June and July 1878 as a guest of John Burns aboard the steamer Mastiff – How the ‘Mastiffs’ went to Iceland (1878) – can be seen as a transitional text where the idea of the North as a place of danger is reshaped as a place of leisure, and partly stripped of its romantic and heroic overtones. In particular, the article investigates Trollope’s ‘domestication’ of Iceland in the interplay between his humorous travel account, revolving around the adventures of the sixteen passengers invited by Burns whom he renames ‘the Mastiffs’, and the essay “Iceland” he wrote in the same year for the Fortnightly Review (1878). Trollope’s ‘dual’ perspective is also discussed in relation to the memoir that Jemima Blackburn, one of the ‘Mastiffs’ and illustrator of Trollope’s book, later wrote for Good Words (1879).
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
geographic Blackburn
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language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(-147.267,-147.267,-86.283,-86.283)
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op_relation volume:XXIX
issue:2
firstpage:63
lastpage:77
numberofpages:15
journal:TEXTUS
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spelling ftuninapoliparth:oai:ricerca.uniparthenope.it:11367/56100 2025-01-16T22:28:57+00:00 Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland ANTINUCCI, Raffaella Antinucci, Raffaella 2016 http://hdl.handle.net/11367/56100 eng eng volume:XXIX issue:2 firstpage:63 lastpage:77 numberofpages:15 journal:TEXTUS http://hdl.handle.net/11367/56100 Iceland travel writing Anthony Trollope Jemima Blackburn info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2016 ftuninapoliparth 2023-12-20T17:43:40Z The nineteenth century saw the golden age of British exploration of Iceland, a country that had long epitomized the inhospitable ‘North’ in the Western imagination. The interest of British travellers shifted from the scientific attitude of the early explorers, attracted by the island’s extraordinary geology and natural phenomena, to the rise of ‘saga tourism’ in the second half of the century. Iceland provided the perfect site on which British ideals of ‘northern’ values, cultural and literary heritage could be projected and renegotiated. In this context, Anthony Trollope’s travelogue of the visit he paid to the island in June and July 1878 as a guest of John Burns aboard the steamer Mastiff – How the ‘Mastiffs’ went to Iceland (1878) – can be seen as a transitional text where the idea of the North as a place of danger is reshaped as a place of leisure, and partly stripped of its romantic and heroic overtones. In particular, the article investigates Trollope’s ‘domestication’ of Iceland in the interplay between his humorous travel account, revolving around the adventures of the sixteen passengers invited by Burns whom he renames ‘the Mastiffs’, and the essay “Iceland” he wrote in the same year for the Fortnightly Review (1878). Trollope’s ‘dual’ perspective is also discussed in relation to the memoir that Jemima Blackburn, one of the ‘Mastiffs’ and illustrator of Trollope’s book, later wrote for Good Words (1879). Article in Journal/Newspaper Iceland Università degli Studi di Napoli "Parthenope": CINECA IRIS Blackburn ENVELOPE(-147.267,-147.267,-86.283,-86.283)
spellingShingle Iceland
travel writing
Anthony Trollope
Jemima Blackburn
ANTINUCCI, Raffaella
Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title_full Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title_fullStr Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title_short Domesticating the North: Anthony Trollope’s re-writing of Iceland
title_sort domesticating the north: anthony trollope’s re-writing of iceland
topic Iceland
travel writing
Anthony Trollope
Jemima Blackburn
topic_facet Iceland
travel writing
Anthony Trollope
Jemima Blackburn
url http://hdl.handle.net/11367/56100