“The Only Almost Germ-Free Continent Left”

Author:

Leane Elizabeth1,Lavery Charne2,Nash Meredith3

Affiliation:

1. School of Humanities, College of Arts, Law and Education, University of Tasmania, Australia

2. Department of English, University of Pretoria, South Africa, and WiSER, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa

3. College of Engineering and Computer Science, Australian National University, Australia

Abstract

AbstractThis article examines the role of pandemics and viruses in cultural perceptions of Antarctica over the past century. In the popular imagination, Antarctica has often been framed as a place of purity, refuge, and isolation. In a series of fiction and screen texts from the nineteenth century to the present, viruses feature prominently. The texts fall into two categories: narratives in which Antarctica is the sole source of safety in a pandemic-ravaged world and those in which a virus (or another form of contagion) is discovered within the continent itself and needs to be contained. Viruses in these texts are not only literal but also metaphorical, taking the form of any kind of threatening infection, and as such are linked to texts in which Antarctic purity is discursively connected to racial and gendered exclusivity. Based on this comparison, the article argues that ideas of containment and contagion can have political connotations in an Antarctic context, to the extent that they are applied to particular groups of people in order to position them as “alien” to the Antarctic environment. The authors show that the recent media construction of Antarctica during COVID-19 needs to be understood against this disturbing aspect of the Antarctic imaginary, and also that narratives of Antarctic purity are imaginatively linked to both geopolitical exclusions and the melting of Antarctic ice.

Publisher

Duke University Press

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Environmental Science (miscellaneous),Anthropology,Ecology

Reference64 articles.

1. Abramovich Paulina . “Antarctica’s Splendid Isolation Keeps Coronavirus at Bay.” France24, May14, 2020. https://www.france24.com/en/20200514-antarctica-s-splendid-isolation-keeps-coronavirus-at-bay.

2. The Cold, White Reproduction of the Same: A New Hypothesis About John Carpenter’s The Thing;Altobelli,2017

3. Disease, Race, and Empire;Anderson;Bulletin of the History of Medicine,1996

4. Bergin Anthony , and PressTony. “Eyes Wide Open: Managing the Australia-China Antarctic Relationship.” Australian Strategic Policy Institute, April27, 2020. https://www.aspi.org.au/report/eyes-wide-open-managing-australia-china-antarctic-relationship.

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