The article implements an ethnographic perspective to explore new modes of engaging with the geopolitics of place in Antarctica. It does so by entertaining the idea that a youth science education initiative undertaken every year in Chile is exemplary of distinctive forms of soft power, where cultural diplomacy plays a significant role alongside scientific practices and international cooperation in the Antarctic. Drawing on critical socio-spatial approaches to conceptualising place and the practices of place-making, the article scales down [or sideways] the discussion of Antarctic geopolitics to an ethnographic account of embodied and situated everyday practices in Fildes Peninsula, King George Island. Visual ethnographic work was undertaken...
This chapter explores the idea of ‘place’ in Antarctica in contrast to dominant visions of a uniform...
Stephen J. Pyne in his book “The Ice. A Journey to Antarctica” points out that ice structures in Ant...
The point of departure chosen for this chapter is an epistemological one: Antarctica is arguably the...
In recent years, the Antarctic has become a fitting space for anthropological analysis and ethnograp...
In recent years, the Antarctic has become a fitting space for anthropological analysis and ethnograp...
Antarctica is physically inaccessible for most, but it lives in the imaginations of many. In this ch...
Over the past two decades, and not unlike other Southern Ocean rim countries, Chile has experienced ...
Antarctica is physically inaccessible for most, but it lives in the imaginations of many. In this ch...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
Research into place identity and attachment is commonly linked to the formative influence of places ...
Research into place identity and attachment is commonly linked to the formative influence of places ...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
This thesis is concerned with the lived experience of placemaking in Argentina’s Antarctic gateway p...
This chapter explores the idea of ‘place’ in Antarctica in contrast to dominant visions of a uniform...
Stephen J. Pyne in his book “The Ice. A Journey to Antarctica” points out that ice structures in Ant...
The point of departure chosen for this chapter is an epistemological one: Antarctica is arguably the...
In recent years, the Antarctic has become a fitting space for anthropological analysis and ethnograp...
In recent years, the Antarctic has become a fitting space for anthropological analysis and ethnograp...
Antarctica is physically inaccessible for most, but it lives in the imaginations of many. In this ch...
Over the past two decades, and not unlike other Southern Ocean rim countries, Chile has experienced ...
Antarctica is physically inaccessible for most, but it lives in the imaginations of many. In this ch...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
Research into place identity and attachment is commonly linked to the formative influence of places ...
Research into place identity and attachment is commonly linked to the formative influence of places ...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
In 1954, a small team of Australian men landed at Horseshoe Harbor and began constructing Mawson Sta...
This thesis is concerned with the lived experience of placemaking in Argentina’s Antarctic gateway p...
This chapter explores the idea of ‘place’ in Antarctica in contrast to dominant visions of a uniform...
Stephen J. Pyne in his book “The Ice. A Journey to Antarctica” points out that ice structures in Ant...
The point of departure chosen for this chapter is an epistemological one: Antarctica is arguably the...