Explorations in the Icy North: How Travel Narratives Shaped Arctic Science in the Nineteenth Century

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Product Details
Price
$40.00  $37.20
Publisher
University of Pittsburgh Press
Publish Date
Pages
240
Dimensions
6.2 X 9.1 X 1.1 inches | 1.01 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780822946595
BISAC Categories:

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About the Author
Nanna Katrine Lüders Kaalund is a postdoctoral research associate in the Scott Polar Research Institute at the University of Cambridge, working as part of the Arctic Cultures project. Her research centers on the intersection of Arctic exploration, print culture, science, religion, and medicine in the modern period with a focus on the British and Danish imperial worlds. Kaalund is also a postdoctoral associate at Darwin College.
Reviews
Perhaps the most valuable aspect of Kaalund's book for English speakers is her comparison of Danish and Greenlandic writing with the better-known British sources. The Kongelige Grønlandske Handel (Royal Greenland Trading Department) ruled Greenland as all-pervasively as the Hudson's Bay Company did Canada, but its accommodation of missionaries created a quite different cultural background from the HBC's hard-nosed focus on trade.-- "Times Literary Supplement"
Explorations in the Icy North is an extremely readable and generously illustrated primer on the motivations, identities, and experiences of those who headed north on expeditions to find the Pole, a new trade route, or exploitable resources or to rescue lost explorers.-- "Isis"
In her engagement with Inuit knowledge and with the texts and histories of Danish settlement in Greenland (in addition to the more familiar British, Norwegian, and American expeditions to the Canadian Arctic), Kaalund brings a welcome new perspective to a topic that is usually approached through monolingual sources.-- "Victorian Studies"
Kaalund . . . brings new perspective on the diversity of cultural interactions of the time.-- "Anchorage Daily News"
Explorations in the Icy North gives readers much to consider about the nature of field science, exploration, intellectual authority, travel writing, and transnational history. Kaalund's book advances our understanding of the Arctic, particularly how and why its nineteenth-century explorers, as well as the imperial powers behind them, recorded their efforts to enter, research, and exploit the region.-- "Journal of Interdisciplinary History"
In this study of the making of Arctic science, Nanna Katrine Lüders Kaalund's originality lies in her attention to Greenland as well as the Canadian archipelago and the shores of the Arctic Ocean; the role of narratives in shaping knowledge; and the role of the Inuit, who have too often been ignored by historians. She brings literary sensibilities as well as historiographical ones to this book, which will accordingly be of interest to historians of imperialism, historians of science, cultural historians, literary scholars, and those simply fascinated by the Arctic.--Trevor H. Levere, University of Toronto