Ice Bear bookcover

Ice Bear

The Cultural History of an Arctic Icon
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Description

Prime Arctic predator and nomad of the sea ice and tundra, the polar bear endures as a source of wonder, terror, and fascination. Humans have seen it as spirit guide and fanged enemy, as trade good and moral metaphor, as food source and symbol of ecological crisis. Eight thousand years of artifacts attest to its charisma, and to the fraught relationships between our two species. In the White Bear, we acknowledge the magic of wildness: it is both genuinely itself and a screen for our imagination.

Ice Bear traces and illuminates this intertwined history. From Inuit shamans to Jean Harlow lounging on a bearskin rug, from the cubs trained to pull sleds toward the North Pole to cuddly superstar Knut, it all comes to life in these pages. With meticulous research and more than 160 illustrations, the author brings into focus this powerful and elusive animal. Doing so, he delves into the stories we tell about Nature--and about ourselves--hoping for a future in which such tales still matter.

Product Details

PublisherUniversity of Washington Press
Publish DateNovember 01, 2016
Pages304
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9780295999227
Dimensions9.9 X 8.1 X 0.8 inches | 2.3 pounds
BISAC Categories: Nature, History, Nature

About the Author

Michael Engelhard is the author of two essay collections, Where the Rain Children Sleep and American Wild, and the editor of four anthologies, including Wild Moments: Adventures with Animals of the North. His writing has appeared in Sierra, Outside, National Wildlife, the San Francisco Chronicle, High Country News, and other publications. Trained as a cultural anthropologist at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, he has participated in fieldwork north of the Arctic Circle. He now guides wilderness trips in Gates of the Arctic National Park and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, his favorite places in the world. Having lived in Nome, at the southern limit of the White Bear's range, these days he calls Fairbanks, Alaska his home.

Reviews

"'Iconic' is the marketing cliché of our times, applied as unthinkingly to wildlife as it is to biscuits. But here, Michael Engelhard digs deeper, tracing how the polar bear came to occupy its place in contemporary culture and, in the process, suggesting what the mechanics of iconography say about us."

--Mike Unwin "BBC Wildlife Magazine"

"[A] beautifully illustrated, hugely engaging book. . . . For all its nightmare-haunting power, however, the aspect of the polar bear that really makes it an icon of the age is its vulnerability . . . . Another merit of the book is the author's willingness to track these themes to their origins."

--Mark Cocker "The Spectator"

"[A] fascinating cultural history of polar bruins in the human imagination. . . richly illustrated with documentary photos and museum work."

--Florangela Davila "Seattle Magazine"

"A compelling chronicle of our fraught relationship with the polar bear. . . . The illustrations throughout the book are beautiful and colorful--especially so for a bear that is basically white except for its claws and nose. . . . Engelhard has written an interesting and wide-ranging review of just how humans think about the ice bear."

--Mark J. Palmer "Earth Island Journal"

"A fascinating subject, dealt with and analysed with all the nuance and caution required. Engelhard is a wonderful storyteller; his writing is engaging, and the knowledge he displays is remarkable."

--Geneviève Pigeon "The Goose"

"Beautifully illustrated."

--Tim Flannery "New Statesman"

"Eminently readable. This work is expertly researched."

--Susan Sommer "Alaska Magazine"

"Engelhard has an apt and unusual background for a book such as this. . . . Among the strengths of Ice Bear is its grasp of the rituals by which humans have always aspired to draw the strength of the polar bear into themselves."

--Mark Abley "Times Literary Supplement"

"Engelhard is a first-rate guide and very capable writer; Ice Bear makes fascinating reading -- although grimly ironic, since the future of the polar bear in the wild has never looked bleaker."

--Steve Donoghue "Open Letters Monthly"

"Engelhard, a Fairbanks resident, is trained as a cultural anthropologist and works as a wilderness guide in Gates of the Arctic National Park and Preserve and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The combination makes him uniquely qualified to have authored this fascinating and extensively illustrated exploration of humanity's deeply complicated relationship with an animal he is well acquainted with."

--David A. James "Alaska Dispatch News"

"Engelhard's thought-provoking iconography explores in depth the multitude of cultural roles played by the polar bear."

--David Fox "Anchorage Press"

"Engelhard's writing has the sort of calm authority that reminds me often of Barry Lopez."

--David Knowles "EarthLines"

"Essayist and wilderness guide Engelhard examines the intertwined history of polar bears and humans in this fascinating look at how we have interpreted the species. . . . Of particular interest now as polar ice melts."

--Nancy Bent "Booklist"

"Ice Bear isn't just for lovers of polar bears. No, ecologists will enjoy it, too, as will environmentally-minded readers, animal lovers, culture mavens, and watchers of the Arctic. Bonus: lots of pictures!""

--Terri Schlichenmeyer

"It is in the setting of concern about global warming that Michael Engelhard has provided us with a wonderful book that uses a charismatic carnivore to help us explore the place of humans on this planet."

--Casey Bush "Bear Deluxe"

"Lets compelling images and snips of history tell the tale of human projection onto the bear's white furry screen."

--Carrie Saxifrage "National Observer"

"Michael Engelhard's Ice Bear joins the ranks as one of the best works devoted to these elusive animals. . . . This was easily one of the best books I've read on the subject of polar bears with information that kept me turning pages. Highly recommended for any bear lover's collection!"

--Chris Nunnally "Where the Bear Walks blog"

"The product of Engelhard's exhaustive research is an eclectic, comprehensive, compelling, and very readable cultural iconography elevated to a level of art form by the inclusion of well-chosen and often stunning illustrations on almost every page. Ice Bear is a visual National Geographic with real verbal punch!"

--Marilyn Gates "New York Journal of Books"

"The visuals set this book apart from most. Rather than simply offering one author's work, it is more akin to a polar bear museum. Each image tells a powerful story - some of them familiar, others outlandish, but all portraying a real animal of mythical proportions. . . . Limiting yourself to the captions would mean that you fail to embark on Engelhard's literary and thrillingly human adventure. . . . At the end of this whirlwind tour of the cultural history of the polar bear, I now have a newfound fascination for the species but also for the people, who live with, depict and study them. Michael Engelhard writes confidently of the physical and metaphysical realms as well as our projections of human fears, fantasies and ambitions onto this quintessential Other."

--Lauriane Suyin Chalmin-Pui "LSE Review of Books"

"This expensively produced glossy book feels like an encyclopedia on a single subject . . . . Engelhard's writing is very enjoyable, and readers interested in the polar bear will have months of reading material."

--George Erdosh "City Book Review"

"Today, polar bears have become corporate mascots, symbols of a changing climate, and sought-after trophies both dead and, as the subjects of photos, alive. But in Ice Bear, Engelhard tries to throw off the sentimentality that marks most modern writing about polar bears in order to focus on their real significance in human culture. It's a book that has as much to say about humans as it does about its subject, and it explores that niche well in an entertaining style."

--James Thompson "Hakai Magazine"

"What has been missing to date has been a thorough review of the cultural associations between humans and polar bears. That gap has now been filled by Michael Engelhard's detailed treatment of the connection between humans and polar bears in Ice Bear. . . . This book should be in the library of all who share this interest and want to know more about this Arctic icon."

--Marty Obbard "International Bear News"

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