Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-9pm4c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-25T20:37:47.543Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

THE COLDEST CRUCIBLE: ARCTIC EXPLORATION AND AMERICAN CULTURE. Michael F. Robinson. 2006. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press. xii + 206 p, illustrated, hardcover. ISBN: 978-0-226-72184-2. US$39.00.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2008

H.W.G. Lewis-Jones*
Affiliation:
Scott Polar Research Institute, University of Cambridge, Lensfield Road, Cambridge, CB2 1ER.
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Book Review
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2007

Guided by previous scholarship that engaged the rich social and institutional contexts of exploration, Michael Robinson turns the frame of focus away from the north toward its domestic audience, in a timely and resonant attempt to consider the cultural importance of the Arctic itself. From the outset, Robinson pays particular attention to what may be called the ‘culture’ of exploration, to the competing demands placed upon explorers by a range of public audiences, the struggles to build support for expeditions before departure and to defend claims upon their return, and the ongoing efforts of explorers to cast themselves as individuals worthy of the nation's full attention. The Arctic became a stage for the performance of strident patriotism as well as becoming a platform for personal gain, and Robinson ably navigates this obvious contradiction.

The structure of the book is simple: there are a series of case-study chapters, chronologically arranged, featuring the travels and tribulations of some ‘emblematic’ Arctic explorers (so chimes the publisher's material), which nevertheless draw numerous connections between these explorers and their public over this crucial period in American history. Although there is some repetition of themes and arguments, perhaps at the cost of more primary materials or further analysis and explanation, through the course of this book Robinson's central thesis does ring clear: to examine Arctic exploration as an activity that unfolded not only in the Arctic but also at home. Through a succession of nineteenth-century scandals, failures, successes, and controversies, Robinson reveals the diminished role of science in Arctic campaigns, and the increased importance of press personality, patronage, and good publicity. He well describes the ‘mercurial’ condition of American culture in the 1850s, for example, a time of new entertainments, new magazines and publishing houses, and expanding readerships. This was a period that witnessed the emergence of a vibrant print culture and a mass reading public. Explorers were much read and talked about and their adventures were re-enacted in lecture halls, theatres, and in all manner of visual entertainments.

It is important to remember that far from being universally praised and lauded, explorers were accompanied at every step with equal measures of scepticism and criticism; although many explorers were fêted by their admirers, raised up for emulation, they were also condemned as fool-hardy, sometimes even vilified because of falling short of the goals that they set for themselves. This questioning of the motives of exploration was not limited to the Cook–Peary controversy of 1909, but can be seen in a long century of cynicism, as numerous expeditions were marred by scandal and very real failure. It was in this lively context of public scrutiny that explorers had to justify, to explain, and, often literally, to ‘sell’ their achievements, burdened by expectation, reaping rewards whilst at the same time often victims of their own self-advertisement. Explorers were concerned as much with profitable publishing contracts, society awards, and securing key lecture engagements as they were with their ability to provide scientific observations and impressive cartographic discoveries. When the redoubtable ‘go it alone’ Robert Peary described exploration as a pursuit so ‘free from discussions, from entanglements, from social complications,’ he was, of course, appealing to an image of exploration that perhaps never existed. Just as his rhetoric swam with idealism and falsehood, his image as an explorer continues both to challenge and inspire those who read about his exploits. Exploration existed within a tangle of pressures, obligations, and the demands of an attentive public. Performing before a range of audiences, polar explorers faced tough challenges well before they left for the ice.

As reader, one travels far during the course of Robinson's book. One witnesses the frenzy of public mourning meeting the funeral cortège of Elisha Kent Kane as it journeys from Cuba to Philadelphia; joins the wealthy roving reporter Walter Wellman, precariously aloft in his 185-foot motorized airship America; and sees Isaac Hayes idling at anchor aboard United States, later returning to a country consumed in Civil War. In other sections of Robinson's narrative one can accompany Charles Francis Hall as he tours lecture theatres with a Nugumiut family, raising interest in his explorations yet pushing showmanship to the limits of exploitation. One can read lurid press accounts of Adolphus Greely and the demise of his party at Cape Sabine, and too the tragedy of the Jeannette. One sits in the audience to watch Frederick Cook on stage with his entourage of Greenlandic dogs, Inuit children, and two barrels of bones disinterred from an ancient grave site, and later can chuckle as he is parodied mercilessly by cartoonists while his claimed attainment of the North Pole erupts into controversy. This is indeed an enjoyable and jaunty trek through the highs and lows of a colourful century of exploration.

There are, of course, many omissions — a book of this length could not hope to be definitive — but also there are some errors that do injustice to an otherwise elegant contribution to this field of academic enquiry. A major missing feature of this examination of the machinery of celebrity is that of visual culture. Although there are many late-century cartoons and some plates from Kane's published works, one feels that illustrations ought to have been better, for a major premise here is that exploration was as much read about during this century as it was viewed, watched, and enjoyed in crowded metropolitan theatres and provincial halls. There is little or no discussion of popular ballads, magic lantern shows, and theatrical entertainments, neither much on the buoyant illustrated press or juvenile literature, nor any consistent coverage of the many dioramas, panoramas, and other ‘Arctic Spectacles’ that toured the country, generating and sustaining interest in explorers and their deeds. The author's brief treatment of the varied ideological contexts of British exploration is also understandable, although in the process he tends toward undue simplification. Robinson's description of Admiralty Arctic voyages as ‘a safer form of conquest, offering many of the advantages of war without the messy commitments of empire,’ employs a tidy turn of phrase at the expense of more satisfying analysis. Likewise, his dichotomic contrasts of Hayes and Hall, and the perceptions that emanated from their differences in approach to travel and to indigenous peoples, are overstressed, yet he does raise interesting avenues for future enquiry into the connections between narrative, national imaginations, and the fluid discourses of racial difference and asserted masculinities. There are occasionally simple slip-ups too, such as his suggestion that Cook reached the Pole on 22 April 1908 (the explorer proclaimed he had attained his prize on 21 April), but this is partly excusable for so much uncertainty still surrounds the passage of events despite almost 100 years of reportage, debate, and retrospective scrutiny.

These reservations withstanding, there is so much here that is really wonderful stuff. Following Beau Riffenburgh's lead in The myth of the explorer, Robinson's analysis of the role of the press in sustaining a popular culture of exploration remains compelling, and is one of the major strengths of this engaging book. The coldest crucible takes a big step toward helping to explain why the North Pole, a region so geographically removed from Americans, became such an iconic destination for discovery. Although brief, I particularly enjoyed Robinson's discussion of the seductive pull of these regions, the ‘Arctic Fever,’ to re-use a borrowed phrase that is more than merely a playful literary metaphor. In fact, the phrase was part of a vocabulary of polar endeavour that many explorers were quick to urge upon their audiences: to justify their actions as pure, romantic impulses and to try to explain away the irrational compulsion that drove them to the north, while at the same time glossing over the very real and rational motives for voyaging, namely the promise of fame and financial reward. This idea still binds many travellers and adventurers — particularly those pseudo-explorers of the present — into ‘deliberate risk-taking in pursuit of a goal of no apparent practical value.’ Just as astronauts hurtle into space, or happy tourists chug north in icebreakers, all are tied by the representations they make to friends, family, perhaps patrons; all bound to the ‘needs of a watchful public.’

Overall, this is a useful study that should have broad appeal: to historians, historians of science, cultural and historical geographers, and, not least, to a large public audience. Robinson's enthusiasm for the subject coupled with a sensitivity for the context and nuance of the production and reception of geographical knowledge in the late nineteenth century — a mix of both ‘evidence’ from the field as well as reputations forged far from the ice — ensures that there is much that can be taken from this particular study of the American cultural landscape. One soon realises too that there is a great deal more to be discovered in exploring the imaginations of an American public that looked towards the north in the nineteenth century.