Writing geographical exploration : James and the Northwest Passage, 1631-33
著者
書誌事項
Writing geographical exploration : James and the Northwest Passage, 1631-33
(Northern lights series / ed. by William Barr, [no. 5])
University of Calgary Press, c2003
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注記
Co-published by the Arctic Institute of North America
Includes bibliographical references (298-308) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Writing Geographical Exploration summarizes the various factors that influence the writing and interpretation of exploration narratives, demonstrating the limitations of the assumption that there is a direct relationship between what the explorer saw and what the text describes.
Davies offers a revisionist evaluation of Captain Thomas James, who spent eighteen months in search of the Northwest Passage in the 1630s, to illustrate how modern textual analysis can enrich the appreciation of a traveller's account. Though James's work has been dismissed in the modern period, his work was highly regarded in previous centuries by scientist Robert Boyle and poet Samuel Coleridge.
James was not a first-rank explorer, but he was an able navigator and leader, a perceptive scientific observer, and a master author who produced a thrilling tale of adventure that should occupy a more prominent place in exploration writing and history, literary theory, and post-modern geography.
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