Abstract

ABSTRACTIdeas promulgated by nineteenth century and twentieth century Arctic explorers have critical resonance today, serving to prop up neoliberal agendas in the Arctic, including Greenland. The identification of themes in the accounts of Arctic explorers allows for a fuller understanding of their Arctic imaginaries; coupling this exercise with an examination of contemporary discourse on natural resource exploitation in the Arctic makes clear the persistence of these imaginaries. This paper uses texts by Greenland explorers Isaac Ira Hayes, Robert Peary, Josephine Diebitsch Peary, Knud Rasmussen and Robert Bartlett followed by reports produced by EU Polar Net and the Brookings Institution to demonstrate the maintenance and promotion of Arctic imaginaries. Among the most prominent themes are the Arctic Greenland as an empty space, which invites and reinforces the legitimacy of neoliberal colonial activities like natural resource exploitation, and the primitiveness, near invisibility and inconsequentiality of Indigenous peoples, including Greenlandic Inuit. Enduring Arctic imaginaries lie at the root of challenges facing Greenland, as an Arctic country, in its ongoing struggle for increased self-determination.

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