[en] Greenland as seen by two contemporary British travellers : Joanna Kavenna and Gavin Francis
Type de document
Auteur(s)
Est une partie de
Mots clés en
Humanities and Social Sciences
Greenland
Arctic discourse
travel writing
colonialism
reflexivity
Mots clés fr
Date de publication
Langue du document
Anglais
Résumé
[en] Greenland has held a prominent place in the English imagination for a long time, its people and landscape sparking a variety of projections including the “Arctic Highlander” (Sir John Ross), “the Greenland bay of indifference” (Robert Burns), or the myth of “Ultima Thule”. This article compares the chapters on Greenland in Joanna Kavenna’s The Ice Museum (2006) and Gavin Francis’s True North : Travels in Arctic Europe (2008), two contemporary travelogues with a historical focus that also address current Arctic issues. The authors’ respective narrative strategies are critically assessed in relation to the diversity of viewpoints (external and internal), as well as the degree of reflexivity, they present. The article discusses what kinds of images their texts fashion, how they relate to the views of contemporary Greenlanders and in what ways the two authors contribute to the idea of a new Arctic narrative.
Nom de la revue
Studies in Travel Writing
Collections
Source
HAL
Type de ressource
Notice
Est une version de
Licence
Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation bibliographique
Jan Borm. Greenland as seen by two contemporary British travellers : Joanna Kavenna and Gavin Francis. Studies in Travel Writing, 2016, 20 (3), pp.262 - 271. [10.1080/13645145.2016.1220660]. [hal-01871972]
Citer cette ressource
[en] Greenland as seen by two contemporary British travellers : Joanna Kavenna and Gavin Francis,
dans Études nordiques,
consulté le 2 Novembre 2025, https://etudes-nordiques.cnrs.fr/s/numenord/item/18079