Abstract

The Arctic has often been regarded (its various indigenous groups notwithstanding) as a desolate and silent void to be explored and defined by Euro-westerners, usuallyin terms of a masculine competitive ethos and an ethnocentric rhetoric of WesternEnlightenment and progress. Surprisingly, even many Norwegian arctic expeditionsof our own time tend to embody similar narratives of conquest and athletic prowess.Among contemporary North-American writers, however, this kind of discourse isprofoundly questioned, particularly by focusing on the problematic function oflanguage itself in our constructions of the Arctic. This article focuses on three North-American books in which the issue of the Euro-western linguistic appropriation ofthe Arctic, its natural environment as well as its peoples, is a major concern; they areall reflections on the issues of writing and silence with reference to the far north. Thethree books are: Barry Lopez' Arctic Dreams: Imagination and Desire in a NorthernLandscape (1987), Aritha van Herk's Places Far from Ellesmere (1990), and JohnMoss' Enduring Dreams: An Exploration of Arctic Landscape (1996). Central in allof them is the following issue: how to make the wordless landscape or the alienculture speak from under, as it were, the enormous compilation of centuries of Eurowesterntext. The article discusses four major strategies by which these three booksattempt to counteract and subvert earlier Euro-western ethnocentric and monologicnarratives of the Arctic: by the inclusion of feminine and indigenous voices; by thelegitimation of the sensuous life-world of the Arctic itself; by the self-reflexivesubversion of the authority of the language of their own texts; and by the use of astyle of paradox and contradiction. By way of such techniques, the books above try to create more open, dialogic and pluralistic readings of the Arctic.

Highlights

  • On the one hand is the first-person, Western “we” and on the other the third-person “them” – the Self versus the Other: “ we find this lovable people inevitably destined either to pass utterly away or to decline into the shadow of what it once was

  • The Legitimation of the Sensuous Life-world of the Arctic Itself Lopez’, van Herk’s, and Moss’ books about the Arctic attempt to give voice to the natural environment itself that they find to have been misrepresented in a great many former narratives

  • Van Herk’s use of a paradoxical style culminates in her physical evocation of the landscape and animals of Ellesmere and the vivid sensation of hiking among them: This is pleasure: escape, water, wind, air, rocks, the lake still frozen in the distance behind you, the potential of glacial ice and snow, of always reading an eternal book, of Anna reading this book you are in, this book of the north, un/read because mysterious, this female desert island and its secret reasons and desires. (130)

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Summary

Introduction

Regions of the circumpolar north, exclusive of Spitsbergen and Franz Joseph Land, were populated by various indigenous groups, explorers tended to regard the arctic landscape as well as its peoples as a terra incognita whose silence was to be broken by the language of Western culture and science.

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