Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen

What we know of polar expeditions coincides with a number of fictional and non fictional representations using different registers: the iconic-technical-scientific, the auto/biographical, the literary/fictional. This paper draws a comparison between texts featuring contrasting views on the character...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lucia Claudia Fiorella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Università degli Studi di Cagliari 2011-05-01
Series:Between
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/97
id doaj-c4dc2bd8f5834a948c9d5be0c04425d4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c4dc2bd8f5834a948c9d5be0c04425d42020-11-24T22:13:56ZengUniversità degli Studi di CagliariBetween2039-65972011-05-011110.13125/2039-6597/9787Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad AmundsenLucia Claudia FiorellaWhat we know of polar expeditions coincides with a number of fictional and non fictional representations using different registers: the iconic-technical-scientific, the auto/biographical, the literary/fictional. This paper draws a comparison between texts featuring contrasting views on the character and purposes of polar expeditions, their supposed usefulness and political consequences, and the certification procedures of scientific knowledge, reflecting broader concerns about the idea of progress, the man/environment relation, and international relations. Fictional and non fictional texts are involved in this ideological confrontation in varying degrees of urgency. However, one cannot fail to note ongoing competition between the two, if only for the fact that the explorers’ accounts take pains to produce hallmarks of authenticity, veridicality and reliability in order not to be mixed up with fiction; on the other hand, fiction makes use of mimetic strategies achieving an amazing effect of realism. The contributor offers a thematic reading of ascent-related tropes, focusing on Jules Verne’s Captain Hatteras (1866) as an example of critical optimism in contrast with the apocalyptic Purple Cloud (1901) by M.P. Shiel, as well as with R.E. Amundsen’s My Polar Flight (1925) – which features an optimism that has lost its Promethean overtones and comes closer to the elation for a sporting achievement.http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/97polar expeditionsexploration narrativeArctic(Jules) Verne(Matthew Phipps) Shiel
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Claudia Fiorella
spellingShingle Lucia Claudia Fiorella
Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
Between
polar expeditions
exploration narrative
Arctic
(Jules) Verne
(Matthew Phipps) Shiel
author_facet Lucia Claudia Fiorella
author_sort Lucia Claudia Fiorella
title Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
title_short Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
title_full Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
title_fullStr Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
title_full_unstemmed Figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da Verne ad Amundsen
title_sort figure dell’ascesi e dell’ascesa: l’esplorazione polare da verne ad amundsen
publisher Università degli Studi di Cagliari
series Between
issn 2039-6597
publishDate 2011-05-01
description What we know of polar expeditions coincides with a number of fictional and non fictional representations using different registers: the iconic-technical-scientific, the auto/biographical, the literary/fictional. This paper draws a comparison between texts featuring contrasting views on the character and purposes of polar expeditions, their supposed usefulness and political consequences, and the certification procedures of scientific knowledge, reflecting broader concerns about the idea of progress, the man/environment relation, and international relations. Fictional and non fictional texts are involved in this ideological confrontation in varying degrees of urgency. However, one cannot fail to note ongoing competition between the two, if only for the fact that the explorers’ accounts take pains to produce hallmarks of authenticity, veridicality and reliability in order not to be mixed up with fiction; on the other hand, fiction makes use of mimetic strategies achieving an amazing effect of realism. The contributor offers a thematic reading of ascent-related tropes, focusing on Jules Verne’s Captain Hatteras (1866) as an example of critical optimism in contrast with the apocalyptic Purple Cloud (1901) by M.P. Shiel, as well as with R.E. Amundsen’s My Polar Flight (1925) – which features an optimism that has lost its Promethean overtones and comes closer to the elation for a sporting achievement.
topic polar expeditions
exploration narrative
Arctic
(Jules) Verne
(Matthew Phipps) Shiel
url http://ojs.unica.it/index.php/between/article/view/97
work_keys_str_mv AT luciaclaudiafiorella figuredellascesiedellascesalesplorazionepolaredaverneadamundsen
_version_ 1725799353953550336