Artigo Revisado por pares

The great trek: New Zealand and the British/Commonwealth 1955–58 Trans-Antarctic Expedition

2005; Taylor & Francis; Volume: 33; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1080/0308653042000329030

ISSN

1743-9329

Autores

Klaus Dodds,

Tópico(s)

Historical Geography and Geographical Thought

Resumo

This article examines New Zealand's role in the British/Commonwealth Trans-Antarctic Expedition (TAE, 1955–58), the first mechanised crossing of Antarctica. Despite much interest in New Zealand's evolving relationship with Britain, the Commonwealth and the United States after 1945, the Antarctic dimension has received little attention. New Zealand's participation in the TAE, alongside activities attached to the International Geophysical Year, strengthened its claims to sovereignty in the Ross Dependency. Instead, popular and media interpretations of the TAE concentrated on perceived rivalries between the two leaders, Vivian Fuchs and Edmund Hillary, thus severely straining Anglo-New Zealand polar relations despite the successful crossing of Antarctica. The fortieth anniversary celebration of the TAE at Scott Base failed to consider critically how New Zealand's relationship with the Antarctic was (and is) imagined and represented.

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