Authors
Alan D Hemmings, Sanjay Chaturvedi, Elizabeth Leane, Daniela Liggett, Juan Francisco Salazar
Publication date
2015/12/5
Journal
The Yearbook of Polar Law Online
Volume
7
Issue
1
Pages
531-555
Publisher
Brill Nijhoff
Description
Whilst nationalism is a recognised force globally, its framing is predicated on experience in conventionally occupied parts of the world. The familiar image of angry young men waving Kalashnikovs means that the idea that nationalism might be at play in Antarctica has to overcome much instinctive resistance, as well as the tactical opposition of the keepers of the present Antarctic political arrangements. The limited consideration of nationalism in Antarctica has generally been confined to the past, particularly “Heroic-Era” and 1930s–1940s expeditions. This article addresses the formations of nationalism in the Antarctic present. Antarctic nationalism need not present in the same shape as nationalisms elsewhere to justify being called nationalism. Here it occurs in a virtual or mediated form, remote from the conventional metropolitan territories of the states and interests concerned. The key aspect of Antarctic nationalism …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
AD Hemmings, S Chaturvedi, E Leane, D Liggett… - The Yearbook of Polar Law Online, 2015