Arctic exploration and the mobility of phrenology: John Ross's ethnographic portraits of the Netsilingmiut
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27646Dato
2022-06-14Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Høvik, IngeborgSammendrag
Analysing a set of ethnographic images and illustrations resulting
from John Ross’s second voyage to find a Northwest Passage in
1829–1833, this article considers the ways in which Arctic
exploration intersected with emergent scientific thinking about
race and ethnicity in Britain. In particular, it examines how
mobility impacted ideas of phrenology and scientific imaging in
the context of the Arctic. As a practitioner of phrenology and
member of the Edinburgh Phrenological Society, Ross’s expertise
in this new mental science certainly travelled with him to the
Arctic. As his field drawings and book illustrations testify,
however, Ross’s knowledge was also affected by his immediate
contact with the Inuit in Boothia Peninsula in Nunavut.
Comparing Ross’s field drawings and illustrations in his twovolume Narrative and Appendix to their accompanying texts and
to select ethnographic illustrations produced by his fellow Arctic
explorers, this article uncovers the material and conceptual
transformations Ross’s scientific visualisation of Inuit underwent
during his physical movement between Britain and the Arctic.
Forlag
Taylor & FrancisSitering
Høvik. Arctic exploration and the mobility of phrenology: John Ross's ethnographic portraits of the Netsilingmiut. Global Intellectual History. 2022:1-24Metadata
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