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The Aesthetic Map of the North, 1845-1859
Author(s) -
I.S. MacLaren
Publication year - 1985
Publication title -
arctic
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 59
eISSN - 1923-1245
pISSN - 0004-0843
DOI - 10.14430/arctic2117
Subject(s) - sublime , arctic , archipelago , globe , realm , beauty , the arctic , aesthetics , perception , landscape painting , geography , painting , history , art history , art , archaeology , psychology , philosophy , geology , epistemology , oceanography , neuroscience
The aesthetics of the Sublime and the Picturesque comprised the perceptual baggage with which early nineteenthcentury British ex- plorers and travellers combed the globe. As important to their identification of space as measurements of longitude and latitude, these two schemata governed the ways in which the Canadian Arctic was described and depicted during the British search for a Northwest Passage from 1819 to 1859. During the last ten years of this period, when the majority of mariners travelled and resided in the arctic archipelago, more and more fanciful representations appeared on the aesthetic map that their writing and painting were charting. These more fanciful mappings opened a wider discre- pancy between perception of landscape and environmental reality, which invited disastrous consequences for the searchers, but in the face of the growing dition that Franklin's crews had been consumed by arctic nature, the need to mask the terror of the realm by invoking modes of describ- ing and depicting European nature became paramount. The adaptation by means of the genial Sublime and the Picturesque of the land, rather than the traveller, if it did not provide what can be considered a realistic picture of the North today, nevertheless fortified British optimism and morale suffi- ciently to see the search for Franklin through to a successful conclusion.

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