Mapping Ultima Thule. Agata Lubowicka

Mapping Ultima Thule - Agata Lubowicka


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rel="nofollow" href="#ulink_981904e9-584d-522c-9905-8c9c83d51070">3 Colonialism and the Discourse of Polar Expeditions: Polar Literature as a Product of Their Liaisons

       3.1 The Eskimo Arcadia and Arcadians: Disrupting the Idealisation Trope

       3.2 The Eskimos are Primitive: Subverting the Essentialisation Trope

       3.3 We and Others: Reversing and Interrogating Binary Oppositions

       3.4 The Inughuit as the “Infinitely Other”: (Missing) Exoticisation

       4 North Greenland and the Inughuit: An Indigenous Myth Perspective

       5 The Narrator’s Voice vs. Native Voices: Master Narrative and Heteroglossia

       6 The New People in the Historical Context

       IV Mapping Ultima Thule: Encounters with the Telluric Other

       1 The First Thule Expedition, 1912–1913

       2 The Split Subject: The Scientist’s Authority vs. the Arctic Hunter’s Instinct

       3 The Male Journey and the Male Adventure

       3.1 The Icesheet and North-East Greenland as a Dangerous Wilderness: Heroisation and Sensationalism

       3.2 A Place “Away from Home”: Home vs. Away

       3.3 Chasing the Scholarly Goals: The Activity-vs.-Passivity Opposition

       3.4 The Inughuit as Representatives of Nature: The Culture-vs.-Nature Opposition

       3.5 Destabilising Binary Oppositions at the Basis of the Polar Explorers’ Male Heroism

       4 North Greenland as Terra Feminarum

       4.1 Scientific Masculinity: Erasing, Charting and Measuring

       4.2 Aesthetic Masculinity: East Greenland and the Icesheet as a Source of the Sublime

       5 Resistance to Othering through Scientific and Aesthetic Masculinity

       5.1 North Greenland as a Source of the Telluric Horror and a Measurement-Resisting Place

       5.2 North Greenland as a Place with a History of Its Own: Language, History and Inughuit Voices

       5.3 “Being within the Landscape” and Dismantling the Primacy of Visual Perception

       5.4 The Space of the Indigenous Myth

       6 My Travel Diary in the Historical Context

       V Conclusion

       Epilogue

       Bibliography

       Index of Names

      Let us not be discouraged if they fail once,

      Let us not be discouraged if they fail again,

      They will not lose!

      They will win!

      For themselves! And for us!

      We fellow countrymen will defend them,

      In a New Year address delivered on 1st January 2016, the Prime Minister of Greenland [Greenlandic: Kalaallit Nunaat] availed himself of this passage from Greenland’s bard Augo Lynge (1899–1959) to appeal to his compatriots for social solidarity and sustained effort for the sake of the island’s economic independence despite all the odds and adversities. The political leaders of Greenland, which has enjoyed substantial autonomy within the Danish Commonwealth since 2009, realise that the complete independence they seek will stand a chance of success only if Greenland stops being dependent on funding from Denmark, which currently accounts for more than half of Greenland’s overall budgetary spending. Given that the narrative of Denmark as a land of universal felicity, social prosperity and an exceptionally humanitarian colonial past is widespread indeed, we should enquire why Greenlanders have actually been so consistent and vocal in their efforts not only to manifest their national distinctiveness but also to win complete independence from Denmark.


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