Ways of Seeing Polar Bears in Fantasy Films, Fiction and Folklore
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3986/Traditio2024530103Keywords:
Arctic, Inuit, folklore, fantasy, horror, media studies, human-animal relationshipAbstract
The polar bear (Ursus maritimus) has had many archetypal functions throughout time and across cultures and has been a key character within traditional tales and mythologies across the Arctic regions. Within Inuit and Greenlandic hunting cultures the polar bear is an important resource for food and clothing, but the bear has also held folkloric and spiritual significance. However, within the realm of anglophonic fantasy-horror films and fiction, the polar bear has frequently been portrayed as a figure of fear, recalling nineteenth century European explorers descriptions of encounters with bears in accounts of Arctic expeditions. A sample of negative representations of polar bears within fantasy-horror film, television, and fictional adaptations are explored and compared to traditional Inuit perspectives, revealing profoundly different perceptions of the natural world.
Downloads
References
Alunik, Ishmael, Eddie D. Kolausok, and David Morrison. 2003. Across Time and Tundra: The Inuvialiut of the Western Arctic. Vancouver: Raincoast Books.
Baker, Daniel. 2012. Why we need Dragons: The Progressive Potential of Fantasy. Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 23 (3): 437–459.
Baker, Steve. 1993. Picturing the Beast: Animals, Identity and Representation. Manchester: Manchester University Press.
Barnim, Douglas A. 2020. The Inner Consistency of Mythology: The Mythological Kernel and Adaptation in The Golden Compass. Mythlore 39 (1): 97–116.
Barr, William, ed. 2019. John Rae, Arctic Explorer: The Unfinished Autobiography. Edmonton: University of Alberta Press.
Bieder, Robert E. 2005. Bear. London: Reaktion.
Birch, Thomas H. 1995. The Incarceration of Wilderness Areas as Prisons. In Deep Ecology for the Twenty First Century, ed. George Sessions, 339–355. Boston, London: Shambhala.
Carroll, Noël. 1987. The Nature of Horror. The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 46 (1): 51–59. DOI: https://doi.org/10.2307/431308.
Cowan, Edward J. 2023. Northern Lights: Scots and the Arctic. Edinburgh: Birlinn.
D’Anglure, Bernard Saladin. 1994. Nanook, Super-Male: The Polar Bear in the Imaginary Space and Social Time of the Inuit of the Canadian Arctic. In: Signifying Animals: Human Meaning in the Natural World, ed. Roy Willis, 178–195. London: Routledge. DOI: https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203169353.
D’Anglure, Bernard Saladin. 2018. Inuit Stories of Being and Rebirth: Gender, Shamanism, and the Third Sex. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press.
Donald, Diana. 2010. The Arctic Fantasies of Edwin Landseer and Briton Riviere: Polar Bears, Wilderness and Notions of the Sublime. Tate Papers 13. URL: https://www.tate.org.uk/research/tate-papers/13/arctic-fantasies-of-edwin-landseer-and-briton-riviere-polar-bears-wilderness-and-notions-of-the-sublime (accessed 17.9.2024).
Dundes, Alan. 1969. Folklore as a Mirror of Culture. Elementary English 46 (4): 471–482.
Henderson, Lizanne. 2020. Bear Tales: Ways of Seeing Polar Bears in Mythology, Traditional Folktales and Modern-Day Children’s Literature. In Contemporary Fairy-Tale Magic: Subverting Gender and Genre, eds. Lydia Brugue and Auba Llompart, 250–261. Leiden: Brill.
Isenberg, Andrew C. 2002. The Moral Ecology of Wildlife. In Representing Animals, ed. Nigel Rothfels, 48–64. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Jackson, Rosemary. 1981. Fantasy: The Literature of Subversion. London: Methuen and Co.
Laugrand, Frederic and Jarich Oosten. 2014. Hunters, Predators and Prey: Inuit Perceptions of Animals. New York: Berghahn.
Laugrand, Frederic and Francis Levesque. 2017. Spotlight on Arctic Animals: Introduction to the Inuit Bestiary. Etudes Inuit Studies 41: 17–28.
Leavenworth, Maria Lindgren. 2010. The Times of Men, Mysteries and Monsters: The Terror and Franklin’s Last Expedition. In Arctic Discourses, ed. Anka Ryall, 199–217. Cambridge Scholars.
Leslie, Sir John. 1831. Narrative of Discovery and Adventure in the Polar Seas and Regions. New York: Harper.
Lindbergh, Ben and Miles Surrey. 2021. Between “The North Water” and “The Terror”, AMC is Obsessed with Gloomy Nautical Dramas. The Ringer, 16.8.2021. URL: https://www.theringer.com/tv/2021/8/16/22623929/amc-the-terror-the-north-water-colin-farrell (accessed 17.9.2024).
McGuire, Ian. 2016. The North Water. London: Scribner.
McManus, Elizabeth Berkebile. 2011. Protecting the Island: Narrative Continuance in Lost. Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 22 (1): 4–23.
Melville, Herman. 2023 [1851]. Moby Dick. New York: Norton and Company.
Millman, Lawrence. 1987. A Kayak Full of Ghosts: Eskimo Tales. Santa Barbara: Capra Press.
Molloy, Claire. 2022. Animals, Avatars and the Gendering of Nature. In Screening Nature: Cinema Beyond the Human, eds. Anat Pick and Guinevere Narraway, 177–193. New York: Berghahn Books.
Nansen, Fridtjof. 1893. Eskimo Life. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
Njal’s Saga. 2001. Harmondsworth: Penguin.
Pullman, Philip. His Dark Materials trilogy; Northern Lights (1995), The Subtle Knife (1997), The Amber Spyglass (2000). London: Scholastic UK.
Rasmussen, Knud. 1908. People of the Polar North. Ed. G. Herring. London: Kegan Paul.
Rasmussen, Knud. 1929. Intellectual Culture of the Hudson Bay Eskimos. Copenhagen: Gyldendal.
Rink, Hinrich. 1997 [1875]. Tales and Traditions of the Eskimo. New York: Dover Publications.
Romalis, Sheila. 1983. The East Greenland Tupilaq Image: Old and New Visions. Etudes Inuit Studies 7 (1): 152–159.
Rothfels, Nigel, ed. 2002. Representing Animals. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. 1898. Wild Animals I Have Known.
Seton, Ernest Thompson. 1925–1928. Lives of Game Animals. 4 volumes. Garden City: Doubleday, Page and Company.
Simmons, Dan. 2007. The Terror. New York: Little, Brown and Company.
Skal, David J. 1993. The Monster Show: A Cultural History of Horror. New York: Faber and Faber.
Skipper, Graham. 2022. Godzilla: The Official Guide to the King of Monsters. London: Welbeck.
Sonne, Birgitte. 2017. Worldview of the Greenlanders: An Inuit Arctic Perspective. Fairbanks: University of Alaska Press.
Stuckenberger, Nicole. 2007. Thin Ice: Inuit Traditions within a Changing Environment. Hanover: University Press of New England.
Thiess, Derek J. 2018. Dan Simmons’s The Terror, Inuit “Legend”, and the Embodied Horrors of History. Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 29 (2): 222–241.
Thompson, David. 2000 [1954]. The People of the Sea. Edinburgh: Canongate.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Authors guarantee that the work is their own original creation and does not infringe any statutory or common-law copyright or any proprietary right of any third party. In case of claims by third parties, authors commit their self to defend the interests of the publisher, and shall cover any potential costs.
More in: Submission chapter