Approaching a Postcolonial Arctic

This article explores different postcolonially configured approaches to the Arctic. It begins by considering the Arctic as a region, an entity, and how the customary political science informed approaches are delimited by their focus on understanding the Arctic as a region at the service of the conte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jensen, Lars
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://forskning.ruc.dk/da/publications/c4e5dae2-0ef8-40bd-a968-e005dd921c79
https://hdl.handle.net/1800/c4e5dae2-0ef8-40bd-a968-e005dd921c79
https://rucforsk.ruc.dk/ws/files/59148954/5_Jensen_Approaching_a_Postcolonial_Arctic.pdf
http://postkolonial.dk/files/KULT%2014/5%20Jensen%20Approaching%20a%20Postcolonial%20Arctic.pdf
Description
Summary:This article explores different postcolonially configured approaches to the Arctic. It begins by considering the Arctic as a region, an entity, and how the customary political science informed approaches are delimited by their focus on understanding the Arctic as a region at the service of the contemporary neoliberal order. It moves on to explore how different parts of the Arctic are inscribed in a number of sub-Arctic nation-state binds, focusing mainly on Canada and Denmark. The article argues that the postcolonial can be understood as a prism or a methodology that asks pivotal questions to all approaches to the Arctic. Yet the postcolonial itself is characterised by limitations, not least in this context its lack of interest in the Arctic, and its bias towards conventional forms of representation in art. The article points to the need to develop a more integrated critique of colonial and neo-colonial presences in the Arctic before moving on to consider artworks about the Arctic that arguably through their transgressive forms pushes at the boundaries of geopolitical, geohistorical and geoaesthetic approaches.