2005
DOI: 10.1017/s0032247405004432
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‘Heroism displayed’: revisiting the Franklin Gallery at the Royal Naval Exhibition, 1891

Abstract: The Royal Naval Exhibition (RNE) of 1891 offers an important entry point for the study of naval mythmaking. Scrutinising one part of the RNE showcase, 'The Franklin Gallery,' highlights the imaginative potential of the polar regions as a resource for imperial visions. This paper provides a review of the RNE and, more closely, considers the ideology of polar exploration in the context of political debate and naval reforms. The utility of images of the Arctic presented at the RNE is discussed, in particular, its… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 26 publications
(22 reference statements)
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“…Brewster [1841Brewster [ ] 1870. From this it is a short move to interpret the hardships of the travelling field scientists, and their solitude and isolation during Arctic winterings, in terms of heroic endurance (Lewis-Jones 2005). In eighteenth century Sweden some of the students of the famous taxonomist Carl Linnaeus were charged by him with the task of travelling globally to find new species for his Systema Naturae.…”
Section: The Mythical Genealogy Of the Polar Heromentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Brewster [1841Brewster [ ] 1870. From this it is a short move to interpret the hardships of the travelling field scientists, and their solitude and isolation during Arctic winterings, in terms of heroic endurance (Lewis-Jones 2005). In eighteenth century Sweden some of the students of the famous taxonomist Carl Linnaeus were charged by him with the task of travelling globally to find new species for his Systema Naturae.…”
Section: The Mythical Genealogy Of the Polar Heromentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Certainly these lines appear to offer good evidence for the last of the claims referred to above. They are not, however, from the journal Scott kept in Antarctica: he wrote them back in England, and, while preparing his book, he was lunching daily at the house of his elderly patron, Sir Clements Markham, who was known to advocate this view (Lewis-Jones 2005: 197). Much later, in The lands of silence , Markham referred to this as ‘one of the noblest passages in Scott's great work’ (1921: 472).…”
Section: Misconceptions About Scott's Attitudes To Dogsmentioning
confidence: 99%