Ever since its disappearance in the mid-19th-century, the fate of the ‘Franklin expedition’ has attracted interest and intrigue. The story has been told and re-told but remained one of ‘mystery’ into the early 21st-century. When the expedition’s two ships were finally located, the narrative shifted with the reappearance of long-absent objects and materials – in turn, posing challenges for museum curators seeking to re-present the story. In this article, we conduct a side-by-side examination of two sites: the 1845 Franklin expedition in the Northwest Passage and the 2017 Death in the Ice exhibition at the National Maritime Museum in Greenwich, UK. We juxtapose these to consider the forces unleashed by the ships’ absence and their presence-in...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article reflects on three Arctic shipwrecks currently being reclaimed for future exhibition. Tw...
This thesis asks whether there existed a unified view of the Arctic during the time period connecte...
Uncovering a wealth of neglected archival information, this book examines both visual and textual ma...
During the winter of 2014-15 the British Library ran a medium-sized exhibition in its Entrance Hall ...
Electronic version excludes material for which permission has not been granted by the rights holderO...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
This article examines the contributions made to Arctic knowledge by Kallihirua, a member of the Inug...
This thesis examines the visual representation of the Canadian Arctic and adjacent regions during th...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
This article compares the histories of two museums of polar exploration, both founded in the 1930s b...
By the 1850s, journalists and readers alike perceived Britain's search for the Northwest Passage as ...
Transiting the Northwest Passage captured the imaginations of explorers and adventures for centuries...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article reflects on three Arctic shipwrecks currently being reclaimed for future exhibition. Tw...
This thesis asks whether there existed a unified view of the Arctic during the time period connecte...
Uncovering a wealth of neglected archival information, this book examines both visual and textual ma...
During the winter of 2014-15 the British Library ran a medium-sized exhibition in its Entrance Hall ...
Electronic version excludes material for which permission has not been granted by the rights holderO...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
This article examines the contributions made to Arctic knowledge by Kallihirua, a member of the Inug...
This thesis examines the visual representation of the Canadian Arctic and adjacent regions during th...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
This article compares the histories of two museums of polar exploration, both founded in the 1930s b...
By the 1850s, journalists and readers alike perceived Britain's search for the Northwest Passage as ...
Transiting the Northwest Passage captured the imaginations of explorers and adventures for centuries...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article reflects on three Arctic shipwrecks currently being reclaimed for future exhibition. Tw...
This thesis asks whether there existed a unified view of the Arctic during the time period connecte...