Arctic images in context

Rereading the Padleimiut photographs in Richard Harrington’s The Face of The Arctic

Authors

  • Janicke S. Kaasa University of Oslo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.48202/25048

Keywords:

travel writing, arctic photography, imagetext, Richard Harrington, Padleimiut, Canadian Arctic, Cold War

Abstract

The article explores how Richard Harrington’s travelogue The Face of the Arctic (1952) responds to and represents the changing Canadian Arctic at the beginning of the Cold War, with a focus on Harrington’s famous photographs of the Padlei famine that were essential in changing the public’s image of the region at the time. Whereas scholars so far have downplayed the complexity of these photographs, this study offers a rereading of the Padleimiut photographs that draws on W. J. T. Mitchell’s concept of imagetext. The analysis of these photographs in relation to the text they appear alongside, the article argues, facilitates a more dynamic understanding of the images and their meaning. As such, the present study exemplifies how Arctic images are dependent on their specific contexts and on contextualizing interpretations.

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Published

2024-01-10

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