Since the earliest of times, islands have captured the artistic imagination—and, often, for the artist who finds his or her muse in being ‘islanded’, the smaller the island the better. Archipelagos offer an ideal setting for artists who take their inspiration from place: on small islands off islands they can experience an intensity of island living they might not otherwise have on a main island: boundedness and connection, isolation and community. This paper examines expressions of islandness by artists who live on islands off islands that are poles apart — ‘archipelagos’ of the Canadian North Atlantic and the Great Southern Ocean. It draws upon interviews with those artists and writers to consider the nature of humans’ attachment and attraction to islands, exploring through the lens of phenomenology what Stratford et al. call the “entanglement between and among islands”.
History
Publication title
Island Studies Journal
Volume
8
Pagination
39-54
ISSN
1715-2593
Department/School
School of Geography, Planning and Spatial Sciences
Publisher
Institute of Island Studies, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada
Place of publication
University of Prince Edward Island, Canada
Rights statement
Copyright 2013 Institute of Island Studies, University of Prince Edward Island, Canada.
Repository Status
Open
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in creative arts and writing studies