Lisa Bloom, Elena Glasberg and Laura Kay,
"Introduction"
(page 4 of 5)
Strategies of Subversion in Feminist Polar Narratives
Just as the photographers use different strategies to approach the
poles, the writers use at least two approaches to produce feminist
narratives about the poles. Some seek to recover the history of women's
involvement in polar exploration, and some use fictional approaches that
imagine alternate histories and revitalize these older heroic narratives
from the perspective of subjects who were historically absented.
Sherrill Grace and Gísli Pálsson's scholarship, for example, reveals
how the study of the arctic has been structured and marked by absences.
Pálsson, an Icelandic anthropologist, opens up the question of how
racial ideologies produced distinctly different national narratives,
both in the Arctic and the West. Pálsson traces the intimate relations
between the anthropologist-explorer Viljalmur Stefansson (1879-1962) and
what he calls "their indigenous collaborators" in the Arctic, focusing
mostly on Stefansson's involvement with the Inuit, in particular his
wife Fanny Pannigabluk and their son Alex.
Grace reintroduces the Canadian woman Arctic explorer, Mina Benson
Hubbard, author of A Woman's Way Through Unknown Labrador (1908),
to polar historiography. In her essay published here, "Inventing Mina
Benson Hubbard: From her 1905 Expedition across Labrador to her 2005
Centennial (and Beyond)," Grace foregrounds the role of white women
explorers at a moment when their narratives were drowned out by the
hyper-masculinist tales of the era. Consequently, Grace is interested
in the complex way Mina Benson Hubbard successfully negotiated her
entrance into this all-white, male space, and the important role that
writing played in scripting her considerable accomplishments.
If Grace emphasizes how Mina Benson Hubbard changed her identity
through her writing and created different discursive selves, artists
have us understand exploration narratives by creating plausible, yet
fictional, accounts from the historical record. The most complex
literary example of how these older heroic narratives are being
re-narrativized from a feminist perspective is Ursula Le Guin's 1982
"Sur," a utopian feminist hoax about an exploration in which a party of
South American women reach the South Pole in 1909, two years before the
official arrival of the real exploration teams of Amundsen and
Scott.[14]
The women characters in Le Guin's fantasy refuse white
masculinist teleologies of conquest and heroism, and significantly, do
not feel compelled to leave any record, or proof, of their presence at
the South Pole. Le Guin relocates the paradox of revolution and power—how
to lead a revolution without replacing (or imitating) the mode of
power that oppresses you—to Antarctica, to free history from its
written or recorded constraints, and to replay territory as space, not
place. Given the reality of its frozen unmanageability and
intractability, Le Guin also keeps Antarctica open, but not as a
conventional territory, or even as a conventional utopia. Antarctica
seems to call for an entirely other mode of relation that geopolitics
and capital cannot easily accommodate. But feminism can—only if it
does not try to re-establish a closed set of possibilities for Antarctic
knowledge.
The challenges of imagining the future of both the Arctic and the
Antarctic have led artists to employ a variety of media and of fictional
techniques. The 2006 British stage play Moj of the Antarctic is
about a 19th Century African-American woman who escapes from North
American slavery by passing as a white man. She ends up on a whaling
ship heading to Antarctica, and becomes both the first woman and first
African-American to reach the continent. Multi-media artist Judit
Hersko has a project titled Pages from the Book of the Unknown
Explorer, a fictional narrative about a female explorer and
Antarctic biologist from the 1930s called Anna Schwartz.[15] In this
issue, we highlight Isaac Julien's film True North, which makes
us reimagine the queerness of the Arctic intimacies by emphasizing the
homosocial and racial relations between Robert Peary and his
African-American exploration partner Matthew Henson, who made many
attempts to reach the North Pole in the early 1900s. Through his
rethinking of these social relations, Julien also asks us to rethink the
meaning of beauty, whether the beauty of the region or the beauty of
film. In her essay, Lisa Bloom puts Julien's film in relation to Connie
Samaras's photography to demonstrate the ways in which a new "polar
aesthetics" not only helps us to imagine a future for the poles (and
hence for a world dependent on the well-being of the poles), but also
future possibilities for artistic endeavors.
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