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Arctic Ambitions: Captain Cook and the Northwest Passage

by James K. Barnett

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Captain James Cook is justly famous for his explorations of the southern Pacific Ocean, but his contributions to the exploration of the northern Pacific and the Arctic are arguably equally significant. On his third and final great voyage, Cook surveyed the northwest American coast in the hopes of finding the legendary Northwest Passage. While dreams of such a passage proved illusory, Cook's journey produced some of the finest charts, collections, and anthropological observations of his career, helped establish British relations with Russia, and opened the door to the hugely influential maritime fur trade. Accompanying an exhibition of the same name, Arctic Ambitions: Captain Cook and the Northwest Passage sheds new light on Cook's northern exploration. A collection of essays from an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars, the book uses artifacts, charts, and records of the encounters between Native peoples and explorers to tell the story of this remarkable voyage and its historical context. In addition to discussing Cook's voyage itself, the book also provides new insights into Cook's legacy and his influence on subsequent expeditions in the Pacific Northwest. Finally, the collection uses Cook's voyage as a springboard to consider the promise and challenge of the "new north" today, demonstrating that it remains, as in Cook's time, a unique meeting place of powerful political, cultural, economic, and environmental forces.… (more)
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To the generation of scholars who have laid the foundation for this study in exploration history
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(Foreword) As Director of the Anchorage Museum at Rasmuson Center, I am delighted to present this anthology of illustrated essays, published to accompany an exhibition of the same name presented in Anchorage and Tacoma during 2015.
(Preface) Despite the opening sentence of J. C. Beagehole's Preface to his magisterial edition of James Cook's manuscript journal of his voyage to the north Pacific and Arctic - "No-one can study attentively the records of Cook's third, and last, voyage without being convinced that it was of the same order of greatness as its two predecessors" - it is perhaps inevitable that the third voyage has suffered in comparison to that first pioneering expedition, which shattered forever the still-vague concept of the Pacific, and the second, which added so much more to the picture and epitomized "enlightened voyaging" at its very best.
(Prologue) Since his death, Captain James Cook has been a legendary figure, an iconic explorer in the historical imagination, and the subject of a vast array of scholarly and popular biographies.
When James Cook set off in 1767 on his Endeavour voyage, the first of his three great Pacific voyages, he was drawing on both his own and his nation's growing experience and understanding of a world beyond the shores of Great Britain.
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Captain James Cook is justly famous for his explorations of the southern Pacific Ocean, but his contributions to the exploration of the northern Pacific and the Arctic are arguably equally significant. On his third and final great voyage, Cook surveyed the northwest American coast in the hopes of finding the legendary Northwest Passage. While dreams of such a passage proved illusory, Cook's journey produced some of the finest charts, collections, and anthropological observations of his career, helped establish British relations with Russia, and opened the door to the hugely influential maritime fur trade. Accompanying an exhibition of the same name, Arctic Ambitions: Captain Cook and the Northwest Passage sheds new light on Cook's northern exploration. A collection of essays from an international and interdisciplinary group of scholars, the book uses artifacts, charts, and records of the encounters between Native peoples and explorers to tell the story of this remarkable voyage and its historical context. In addition to discussing Cook's voyage itself, the book also provides new insights into Cook's legacy and his influence on subsequent expeditions in the Pacific Northwest. Finally, the collection uses Cook's voyage as a springboard to consider the promise and challenge of the "new north" today, demonstrating that it remains, as in Cook's time, a unique meeting place of powerful political, cultural, economic, and environmental forces.

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