"Perhaps Hill's most important contribution is her refusal to treat polar exploration as a world apart ... Its practice and meanings have been influenced by historical circumstances, even as exploration itself has had important consequences for broader historical developments. In the end, Hill's commitment to maintaining an awareness of this connection reminds us of the ongoing need to treat exploration as deeply connected to its historical context and of the valuable insights that can be gained from such an awareness." -- Northern Review
"...Hill's arguments are persuasive, marshalling much useful historical and literary information and engaging with it in a theoretically sophisticated way." -- Polar Record
"...argues persuasively that during the 19th century the Arctic served as a blank space onto which readers could project their ideas, emotions, and beliefs concerning the British colonial project." -- CHOICE
"Hill knows both Romantic and Victorian literature well. Her argument consolidates current scholarly interests in both fields, particularly imperial science, travel narrative, gender, and nationalism. The book excels in its generic range as well, covering novels, poetry, travel narrative, biography, sensation drama, and other forms in satisfying depth." -- Noah Heringman, editor of Romantic Science: The Literary Forms of Natural History
"Nineteenth-century polar studies is an important and expanding field of inquiry and Hill is one of the first to study the Arctic in relation to the British Empire." -- Eric G. Wilson, author of The Spiritual History of Ice: Romanticism, Science, and the Imagination
From explorers' accounts to boy's adventure fiction, this book shows how Arctic exploration served as a metaphor for nation-building and empire in nineteenth-century Britain.