Stuhl, Andrew (Author)
This dissertation connects modern concerns about climate change in the Arctic to histories of environmental transformation, economic expansion, and political intervention there. I argue that the seemingly unprecedented scientific, corporate, and governmental attention paid to the top of the world today is better understood as the latest in a series of attempts to understand, exploit, and protect the region. My study is grounded in the north slope of Alaska, the Yukon Territory, and the Northwest Territories, an area I call the Western Arctic. Drawing from scientists' journals, letters, and publications--as well as oral histories with Inuit residents--I trace the development of scientific knowledge about the human and natural communities in the region. In the late 1800s, the Western Arctic was considered dangerous, which mirrored failed attempts by British and Russian imperial agents to conquer the northern fringes of the New World. As the U.S. and Canada acquired Arctic territories and sought to administer and develop them, they overhauled ideas about the place. Over the twentieth century, the Western Arctic was repeatedly imagined as at risk, which licensed scientific authority over the far north as well as political and economic interventions there. Scientific conceptions of the Western Arctic as endangered, unsettled, wild and strategic reflected both particular research practices as well as particular schemes of stewarding lands that did not belong to them. This project contributes to several historical literatures. Studies of the north in the United States and Canada have confined analyses to national borders and overlooked the roles played by scientists in northward political and economic expansion. Similarly, historians of science and empire have neglected Arctic locations as possible sites of imperial activity. A transnational perspective on the north--and its flows of ideas, goods, and people--reveals that the Arctic has always been linked to networks of power. Ultimately, this project asserts that modern notions of a New North--as a pristine wilderness only now experiencing the effects of the industrialized world--conceal troubling histories and prevent scholars from responding attentively to global warming and globalization.
...MoreDescription Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 76/04(E), Oct 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1640903440.
Chapter
Sörlin, Sverker;
(2013)
Introduction: Polar Extensions---Nordic States and Their Polar Strategies
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001421147/)
Book
Josephson, Paul R.;
(2014)
The Conquest of the Russian Arctic
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001422068/)
Thesis
Emelin Elizabeth Miller;
(2019)
Empire of Ice: Arctic Natural History and British Visions of the North, 1500-1800
(/p/isis/citation/CBB984131524/)
Thesis
Daniella McCahey;
(2018)
Extreme Environments and the Production of Scientific Knowledge: The History of Science in Antarctica
(/p/isis/citation/CBB933911142/)
Book
John R. Bockstoce;
(2018)
White Fox and Icy Seas in the Western Arctic: The Fur Trade, Transportation, and Change in the Early Twentieth Century
(/p/isis/citation/CBB031576298/)
Article
Jasen, Patricia;
(2011)
Menopause and Historical Constructions of Cancer Risk
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001250781/)
Article
Cavell, Janice;
(2013)
Publishing Sir John Franklin's Fate: Cannibalism, Journalism, and the 1881 Edition of Leopold McClintock's The Voyage of the “Fox” in the Arctic Seas
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001201827/)
Article
MacEachern, Alan;
(2010)
J.E. Bernier's Claims to Fame
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001211529/)
Article
McCorristine, Shane;
(2013)
“Involuntarily We Listen”: Hearing the Aurora Borealis in Nineteenth-Century Arctic Exploration and Science
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001320858/)
Article
Alexandra Bekasova;
(2020)
Voyaging Towards the Future: The Brig Rurik in the North Pacific and the Emerging Science of the Sea
(/p/isis/citation/CBB936084999/)
Article
Zeller, Suzanne;
(2014)
Wild Men In and Out of Science: Finding a Place in the Disciplinary Borderlands of Arctic Canada and Greenland
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001450342/)
Book
Byrne, Angela;
(2013)
Geographies of the Romantic North: Science, Antiquarianism, and Travel, 1790--1830
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001452023/)
Article
Doel, Ronald E.;
Friedman, Robert Marc;
Lajus, Julia;
Sörline, Sverker;
Wråkberg, Urban;
(2014)
Strategic Arctic Science: National Interests in Building Natural Knowledge---Interwar Era through the Cold War
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001450344/)
Article
Bathsheba Demuth;
(2019)
The Walrus and the Bureaucrat: Energy, Ecology, and Making the State in the Russian and American Arctic, 1870–1950
(/p/isis/citation/CBB042440470/)
Article
Postnikov, Alexey V.;
(2008)
Geographic Explorations of Russian Orthodox Church Missionaries in the Russian America (Late Eighteenth--Early Nineteenth Centuries)
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001021144/)
Book
Inglis, Robin;
(2008)
Historical Dictionary of the Discovery and Exploration of the Northwest Coast of America
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001033370/)
Book
Emil Bessels;
(2016)
Polaris: The Chief Scientist's Recollections of the American North Pole Expedition, 1871-73
(/p/isis/citation/CBB695538374/)
Article
Froggatt, Peter;
Walker, Brian M.;
(2012)
From Precocious Fame to Mature Obscurity: David Walker (1837--1917) MD, LRSCIi, Surgeon and Naturalist to the Fox Arctic Expedition of 1857--59
(/p/isis/citation/CBB001200784/)
Book
Colin Burgess;
Don Thomas;
(2019)
Shattered Dreams: The Lost and Canceled Space Missions
(/p/isis/citation/CBB446727681/)
Book
Suman Seth;
(2018)
Difference and Disease: Medicine, Race, and the Eighteenth-Century British Empire
(/p/isis/citation/CBB771709821/)
Be the first to comment!