Thesis ID: CBB001567590

Between the Arctic & the Adriatic: Polar Exploration, Science & Empire in the Habsburg Monarchy (2014)

unapi

Walsh, Stephen Anthony (Author)


Johnson, Alison F.
Armitage, David
Wolff, Larry
Harvard University
Blackbourn, David
Armitage, David
Wolff, Larry
Blackbourn, David


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Advisor: Johnson, Alison F; Committee Members: Blackbourn, David, Armitage, David, Wolff, Larry.
Physical Details: 415 pp.
Language: English

Exploration was a defining aspect of how European societies encountered and established relations with the wider world. It set the stage for worldwide empires and laid the foundations for understandings of planetary existence. Exploration facilitated the exchange of commodities and ideas, the migration of peoples and the construction of scientific knowledge. This dissertation examines the nexus between ice and imperium through a study of how citizens of the Habsburg Monarchy contributed to polar exploration. In the long nineteenth century, the two main objects of European exploration were Africa and the polar regions. In the former, the dynamic between exploration and empire was fairly straightforward. But how did imperialism function in the frozen, uninhabited, latitudes of the world? This question becomes more problematic for the Habsburg Monarchy, a multinational polity with eleven officially recognized languages, and a self-professed empire that was the one European "Great Power" at the time without overseas colonies. This dissertation analyzes how the symbology and practice of polar exploration was used in the service of sundry--and frequently contradictory--political projects, including various nationalist activisms, Habsburg loyalism, and the liberal politics of notables. The analysis incorporates a case study in the convoluted road between discovery and empire, Franz Josef Land, the northernmost terrain in Eurasia, discovered by an Austro-Hungarian expedition in 1873. This dissertation then traces fractures within the Austro-Hungarian culture of exploration, as explorer/scientists could reach little consensus on the goals and practices for expeditions to the farthest latitudes of the globe. Finally, it examines how the rise of mass-data driven inductive sciences, such as geomagnetism, caused a fundamental redefinition in the practice of polar research toward a model of corporate, coordinated scientific effort and transnational cooperation. With the emergence of nation states and colonial empires, the basic frameworks of sovereignty, legitimacy and political meaning were changing and this study highlights how Habsburg subjects contributed to these modernization processes. In so doing, it brings to light neglected but lasting aspects of nineteenth century imperialism and treats both nationalism and empire as research problems rather than given ends.

...More

Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 76/03(E), Sep 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1625428199.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567590/

Similar Citations

Article Warrior, Claire; (2013)
“On Thin Ice”: The Polar Displays at the National Maritime Museum, Greenwich (/isis/citation/CBB001421586/)

Article Larson, Edward J.; (2011)
Public Science for a Global Empire: The British Quest for the South Magnetic Pole (/isis/citation/CBB001022860/)

Book Robinson, Michael F.; (2006)
The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture (/isis/citation/CBB000741491/)

Book Murphy, David Thomas; (2002)
German Exploration of the Polar World: A History, 1870-1940 (/isis/citation/CBB000201495/)

Book Wråkberg, Urban; (1999)
The Centennial of S. A. Andree's North Pole Expedition (/isis/citation/CBB000110122/)

Book Speak, P.; (2003)
William Speirs Bruce: Polar Explorer and Scottish Naturalist (/isis/citation/CBB000502720/)

Article Fogg, G. E.; (2000)
The Royal Society and the Antarctic (/isis/citation/CBB000110991/)

Thesis Robinson, Michael Frederick; (2002)
The Coldest Crucible: Arctic Exploration and American Culture, 1850--1910 (/isis/citation/CBB001562504/)

Book Hill, Jen; (2008)
White Horizon: The Arctic in the Nineteenth-Century British Imagination (/isis/citation/CBB000830506/)

Chapter Yayanos, A. Aristides; (2002)
George Wallace Melville: His Influence Through Polar Exploration (/isis/citation/CBB000202314/)

Book Wråkberg, Urban; (1999)
Vetenskapens vikingatåg: Perspektiv pa svensk polarforskning 1860-1930 (/isis/citation/CBB000082470/)

Book Day, David; (2013)
Antarctica: A Biography (/isis/citation/CBB001421625/)

Book Felsch, Philipp; (2010)
Wie August Petermann den Nordpol erfand (/isis/citation/CBB001250252/)

Book Beardsley, Martyn; (2002)
Deadly Winter: The Life of Sir John Franklin (/isis/citation/CBB000470330/)

Article Kingston, Ralph; (2014)
Trading Places: Accumulation as Mediation in French Ministry Map Depots, 1798--1810 (/isis/citation/CBB001551586/)

Chapter Schaffer, Simon; (2010)
Exact Sciences and Colonialism: Southern India in 1900 (/isis/citation/CBB001023235/)

Authors & Contributors
Wråkberg, Urban
Warrior, Claire
Yayanos, A. Aristides
Speak, P.
Schaffer, Simon
Robinson, Michael Frederick
Journals
Physis: Rivista Internazionale di Storia della Scienza
Notes and Records: The Royal Society Journal of the History of Science
Museum History Journal
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
History of Science
Archives of Natural History
Publishers
University of Wisconsin at Madison
University of Nebraska Press
University of Chicago Press
State University of New York Press
Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences
Oxford University Press
Concepts
Travel; exploration
Scientific expeditions
Science and government
Imperialism
Science and culture
Biographies
People
Barbié du Bocage, Jean Denis
Shackleton, Ernest Henry
Scott, Robert Falcon
Petermann, August
Peary, Robert Edwin
Melville, George Wallace
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century
18th century
17th century
Places
Polar regions
Great Britain
United States
Antarctica
Germany
France
Institutions
Royal Society of London
Habsburg, House of
National Maritime Museum (Great Britain)
Comments

Be the first to comment!

{{ comment.created_by.username }} on {{ comment.created_on | date:'medium' }}

Log in or register to comment