From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883

This thesis examines the making and communicating of knowledge about the Arctic from a transnational perspective between 1818 and the First International Polar Year in 1882-83. By examining both well-known and hitherto neglected narratives from Danish, British, and British-Canadian Arctic exploratio...

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Main Author: Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders
Other Authors: Lightman, Bernard V.
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33574
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spelling ftyorkuniv:oai:yorkspace.library.yorku.ca:10315/33574 2023-05-15T14:32:29+02:00 From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883 Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders Lightman, Bernard V. 2017-07-27T13:45:15Z application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33574 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33574 Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests. Exploration Travel literature Travel narrative Travel writing Arctic Arctic exploration Danish Imperialism British Imperialism Canadian history Indigenous history Ethnohistory European history Imperial history Transnational history Human geography Exploration science Victorian studies Book history Publishing history Print culture Science and technology studies History of Science Franklin expedition International Polar Year Electronic Thesis or Dissertation 2017 ftyorkuniv 2022-08-22T12:57:36Z This thesis examines the making and communicating of knowledge about the Arctic from a transnational perspective between 1818 and the First International Polar Year in 1882-83. By examining both well-known and hitherto neglected narratives from Danish, British, and British-Canadian Arctic explorations, I show that changes in ideas about what it meant to be an authoritative observer of Arctic phenomena were linked to tensions in imperial ambitions, national identity, and international collaboration. By framing polar surveying in the broadest sense as the ordering and quantifying of nature through travel, I analyse how abstract notions of the Arctic became tangible in the nineteenth century. I am concerned with the practices of writing the Arctic experience, especially the relationship between science, and the strategies for constructing a trustworthy narrative voice. That is, I investigate the ways in which the identities of the explorers and the organizing bodies shaped the expeditions, and by extension the representation of the ventures, the explorers, and the science they produced. In doing so, I argue that the Arctic played a key role in shaping Western science, and understandings of national and imperial identities, and that travel narratives were a significant resource for communicating this knowledge. This thesis is divided into four chapters that each considers three case studies, roughly organized according to chronology. Drawing on major themes within British and Danish imperial history, Canadian studies, studies in travel writing, history of science, transnational and global history, and environmental studies, I show how perceptions of the Arctic as a field-site for the production of scientific knowledge varied according to time and place throughout the nineteenth century, and how this influenced science in the Arctic. In particular, I show the shift from early scientific practices during Arctic explorations, to a more unified Arctic science as part of the International Polar Year. What emerges is a ... Thesis Arctic International Polar Year York University, Toronto: YorkSpace Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection York University, Toronto: YorkSpace
op_collection_id ftyorkuniv
language English
topic Exploration
Travel literature
Travel narrative
Travel writing
Arctic
Arctic exploration
Danish Imperialism
British Imperialism
Canadian history
Indigenous history
Ethnohistory
European history
Imperial history
Transnational history
Human geography
Exploration science
Victorian studies
Book history
Publishing history
Print culture
Science and technology studies
History of Science
Franklin expedition
International Polar Year
spellingShingle Exploration
Travel literature
Travel narrative
Travel writing
Arctic
Arctic exploration
Danish Imperialism
British Imperialism
Canadian history
Indigenous history
Ethnohistory
European history
Imperial history
Transnational history
Human geography
Exploration science
Victorian studies
Book history
Publishing history
Print culture
Science and technology studies
History of Science
Franklin expedition
International Polar Year
Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders
From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
topic_facet Exploration
Travel literature
Travel narrative
Travel writing
Arctic
Arctic exploration
Danish Imperialism
British Imperialism
Canadian history
Indigenous history
Ethnohistory
European history
Imperial history
Transnational history
Human geography
Exploration science
Victorian studies
Book history
Publishing history
Print culture
Science and technology studies
History of Science
Franklin expedition
International Polar Year
description This thesis examines the making and communicating of knowledge about the Arctic from a transnational perspective between 1818 and the First International Polar Year in 1882-83. By examining both well-known and hitherto neglected narratives from Danish, British, and British-Canadian Arctic explorations, I show that changes in ideas about what it meant to be an authoritative observer of Arctic phenomena were linked to tensions in imperial ambitions, national identity, and international collaboration. By framing polar surveying in the broadest sense as the ordering and quantifying of nature through travel, I analyse how abstract notions of the Arctic became tangible in the nineteenth century. I am concerned with the practices of writing the Arctic experience, especially the relationship between science, and the strategies for constructing a trustworthy narrative voice. That is, I investigate the ways in which the identities of the explorers and the organizing bodies shaped the expeditions, and by extension the representation of the ventures, the explorers, and the science they produced. In doing so, I argue that the Arctic played a key role in shaping Western science, and understandings of national and imperial identities, and that travel narratives were a significant resource for communicating this knowledge. This thesis is divided into four chapters that each considers three case studies, roughly organized according to chronology. Drawing on major themes within British and Danish imperial history, Canadian studies, studies in travel writing, history of science, transnational and global history, and environmental studies, I show how perceptions of the Arctic as a field-site for the production of scientific knowledge varied according to time and place throughout the nineteenth century, and how this influenced science in the Arctic. In particular, I show the shift from early scientific practices during Arctic explorations, to a more unified Arctic science as part of the International Polar Year. What emerges is a ...
author2 Lightman, Bernard V.
format Thesis
author Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders
author_facet Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders
author_sort Kaalund, Nanna Katrine Luders
title From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
title_short From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
title_full From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
title_fullStr From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
title_full_unstemmed From Science in the Arctic to Arctic Science: A Transnational Study of Arctic Travel Narratives, 1818-1883
title_sort from science in the arctic to arctic science: a transnational study of arctic travel narratives, 1818-1883
publishDate 2017
url http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33574
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
International Polar Year
genre_facet Arctic
International Polar Year
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10315/33574
op_rights Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.
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