Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of discovering the Northwest Passage in what is now Canada. During their journey, both ships got stuck in ice near King William Island and eventually sank. Over time, searches were held in order to find both wrecks. More recently, under the Conservative Government of Stephen Harper (2006–2015) there was renewed interest regarding what is now referred to as Franklin’s lost expedition. Searches resumed and narratives were formed regarding the importance of this expedition for Canadian identity. This article is embedded in a sociocultural perspective and will examine the role that cultural heritage can play in the geopolitics of the Arctic wh...
Uncovering a wealth of neglected archival information, this book examines both visual and textual ma...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article critically examines the assumption that the men of Sir John Franklin's last Arctic expe...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
Transiting the Northwest Passage captured the imaginations of explorers and adventures for centuries...
International audienceThis reflection deals with the role Inuit knowledges and oral history played i...
This thesis examines the visual representation of the Canadian Arctic and adjacent regions during th...
Sir John Franklin’s three expeditions to the high Arctic in 1819, 1825, and 1845 have become the stu...
The Northwest Passage has always held a symbolic role in the mythology of Canadian nationalism, but ...
The writing of historical polar exploration in the English-speaking academy has undergone a substant...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
In 1853 a British Naval Expedition, involved in the search for the missing British Naval Northwest P...
The dissertation considers the early twentieth century culture of northern Canadian exploration thro...
The dissertation considers the early twentieth-century culture of northern Canadian exploration thro...
Uncovering a wealth of neglected archival information, this book examines both visual and textual ma...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article critically examines the assumption that the men of Sir John Franklin's last Arctic expe...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
Sir John Franklin’s ships departed from Greenhithe port in Great Britain (1845) with the aim of disc...
Transiting the Northwest Passage captured the imaginations of explorers and adventures for centuries...
International audienceThis reflection deals with the role Inuit knowledges and oral history played i...
This thesis examines the visual representation of the Canadian Arctic and adjacent regions during th...
Sir John Franklin’s three expeditions to the high Arctic in 1819, 1825, and 1845 have become the stu...
The Northwest Passage has always held a symbolic role in the mythology of Canadian nationalism, but ...
The writing of historical polar exploration in the English-speaking academy has undergone a substant...
Visitors to the Arctic enter places that have been traditionally imagined as otherworldly. This stra...
In 1853 a British Naval Expedition, involved in the search for the missing British Naval Northwest P...
The dissertation considers the early twentieth century culture of northern Canadian exploration thro...
The dissertation considers the early twentieth-century culture of northern Canadian exploration thro...
Uncovering a wealth of neglected archival information, this book examines both visual and textual ma...
The paper examines the changing cultural perceptions of one of the most famous and mysterious geogra...
This article critically examines the assumption that the men of Sir John Franklin's last Arctic expe...