Ice remains hot at the moment. Duckworthâs publication of Fridtjof Nansenâs Farthest North joins a number of recent editions of the classic texts of polar exploration, including Scottâs Last Journey and Ernest Shackletonâs South . Displays of polar literature are a regular feature of high-street booksellers, while the National Maritime Museumâs new exhibition on the race to the South Pole has been drawing large crowds to Greenwich, in contrast to a rival local attraction.
The forces driving this resurgence of interest in polar exploration and mountaineering are complex. Recent American attention was partly generated by management studies of Shackletonâs compelling style of charismatic leadership. Three forces, though, seem particularly significant. First, the current wave of popular history reflects the affluence, literacy and education of contemporary society. Second, the fascination with figures such as Mallory and Nansen articulates a disenchantment with modern technology and a yearning for straightforward tales of heroic manliness. Finally, the stories of Captain Scott and Co are simply cracking good yarns.
Fridtjof Nansen, born in Christiania (Oslo) in 1861, came to public notice after leading the first recorded crossing of Greenland in 1888. But Nansenâs second Arctic expedition between 1893 and 1896, which he narrates in Farthest North , brought the young Norwegian international fame. Nansenâs proposal to allow his ship to become trapped in the ice off the north coast of Russia and drift across the North Pole was greeted with astonishment. The drift of the Fram , specially built to Nansenâs design to withstand the pressure of the pack ice, finally proved that the North Pole was located on neither an open sea nor a stable icecap, but on a shifting changeable pack.
When he realised the Fram would not drift across the Pole itself, Nansen set out from the ship to establish a new record âfarthest Northâ of latitude 86˚ 10ÂŽN, 370km from the Pole. With his companion Hjalmar Johansen, Nansen spent over a year away from the ship before reaching safety at the camp of another explorer, Frederick Jackson, in Franz Josef Land.
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First published in English in February 1897, Farthest North proved an instant bestseller, fully justifying the publisher Constableâs ÂŁ10,000 advance (around ÂŁ500,000 in present terms). Nansenâs narrative retains its appeal. The immediacy of the diary form in which the majority of the book is written immerses the reader in the uncertain world of the polar explorer, in thrall to the capricious character of ice. Nansenâs daring, ingenuity and resilience continue to inspire, and Farthest North remains a testament to a lost world, before scientific research and heroic adventure were compartmentalised.
Max Jones is director of studies in history, Christâs College, Cambridge.
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Farthest North
Author - Fridtjof Nansen
ISBN - 0 7156 3031 8
Publisher - Duckworth
Price - ÂŁ25.00
Pages - 508
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