Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries

Representations of islands in Western fiction typically revolve around tropical islands. Critical discourse tends to reproduce this tendency and rarely addresses the specific spatial poetics of cold-water island fictions. This paper discusses three texts that poetically deploy the geographical inven...

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Main Author: Johannes Riquet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Island Studies Journal 2016-05-01
Series:Island Studies Journal
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.24043/isj.340
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author Johannes Riquet
author_facet Johannes Riquet
author_sort Johannes Riquet
collection DOAJ
description Representations of islands in Western fiction typically revolve around tropical islands. Critical discourse tends to reproduce this tendency and rarely addresses the specific spatial poetics of cold-water island fictions. This paper discusses three texts that poetically deploy the geographical inventory of northern snow- and icescapes to challenge essentialist assumptions about islands: D. H. Lawrence’s short story “The man who loved islands”, Georgina Harding’s novel The solitude of Thomas Cave, and Michel Serres’s treatise Le passage du Nord-Ouest. It is argued that these texts reflect on the importance of the horizontal and vertical components of material and textual topographies for the conception and experience of islands. In all three, the physical transformation of the islandscapes by snow and ice serves to put the island concept itself into question. Serres’s philosophical text geopoetically portrays the Arctic archipelago of the Northwest Passage to explore the reciprocal relations between language and the material world. In Lawrence and Harding, the snow-covered islands cease to function as economically productive spaces and turn into complex spatial figures offering a philosophical meditation on islandness as a contradictory and multifaceted condition.
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spelling doaj.art-e5fc3ada965444a79f3ad65871372c7b2024-09-12T22:55:15ZengIsland Studies JournalIsland Studies Journal1715-25932016-05-01111Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island ImaginariesJohannes RiquetRepresentations of islands in Western fiction typically revolve around tropical islands. Critical discourse tends to reproduce this tendency and rarely addresses the specific spatial poetics of cold-water island fictions. This paper discusses three texts that poetically deploy the geographical inventory of northern snow- and icescapes to challenge essentialist assumptions about islands: D. H. Lawrence’s short story “The man who loved islands”, Georgina Harding’s novel The solitude of Thomas Cave, and Michel Serres’s treatise Le passage du Nord-Ouest. It is argued that these texts reflect on the importance of the horizontal and vertical components of material and textual topographies for the conception and experience of islands. In all three, the physical transformation of the islandscapes by snow and ice serves to put the island concept itself into question. Serres’s philosophical text geopoetically portrays the Arctic archipelago of the Northwest Passage to explore the reciprocal relations between language and the material world. In Lawrence and Harding, the snow-covered islands cease to function as economically productive spaces and turn into complex spatial figures offering a philosophical meditation on islandness as a contradictory and multifaceted condition.https://doi.org/10.24043/isj.340
spellingShingle Johannes Riquet
Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
Island Studies Journal
title Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
title_full Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
title_fullStr Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
title_full_unstemmed Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
title_short Islands Erased by Snow and Ice: Approaching the Spatial Philosophy of Cold Water Island Imaginaries
title_sort islands erased by snow and ice approaching the spatial philosophy of cold water island imaginaries
url https://doi.org/10.24043/isj.340
work_keys_str_mv AT johannesriquet islandserasedbysnowandiceapproachingthespatialphilosophyofcoldwaterislandimaginaries