Sponsors: The Antarctic Circle and Falcon Scott
Co-Sponsors:
Don Webster (New Zealand),
Janice Tipping (England)
Joan Boothe (USA)
Maggs Bros. Booksellers (England),
Kingsbridge Books (Paul Davies, England),
Meridian Rare Books (Stuart Leggatt, England),
Fram Museum (Geir Kløver, Norway)
Home
Principles of the SouthPole-sium
Blog
Schedule/Agenda
Registration information and Form
Those who have registered
Those who are planning to attend
Those who have expressed interest in attending
Subjects of talks proposed to be presented so far
Subject ideas for talks that might be presented
Craobh Haven
Lunga House, our venue
Accommodation options
Links relative to Scotland
Wardroom Dinners on board the Discovery in Dundee
Updates & E-mails
Comments from those contacted
SUBJECT IDEAS FOR TALKS THAT MIGHT BE PRESENTED
Left over from the first SouthPole-sium:
• Some Antarctic bibliographic oddities.
• Writing for publication.
• Towards a short title catalogue of journals & diaries of Antarctic explorers.
• Some journals & diaries worth publishing.
• Some published works worth re-printing.
• Expedition publications; from the Blizzard to the Barrier Bull.
• Expedition libraries: Books that went South.
• References to food and drink in Antarctic expedition accounts.
• References to tobacco in Antarctic expedition accounts.
• Printed Antarctic ephemera.
• Scott as a writer.
• Shackleton's "ghost writer."
• Some Antarctic marginalia.
• Some association copies.
• Some extra-illustrated copies.
• "My greatest treasure."
• "My greatest biblio-find."
• Antarctic poetry: composed on expeditions and afterwards.
• Tekeli-li; or, Fauno Cordes and Antarctic fiction.
• Antarctica on the stage.
• Some approaches to cataloguing and arranging an Antarctic collection.
• Antarctic maps worth collecting.
• Shackleton and Fine Printing.
• Antarctic cartoons and caricatures.
• Some Antarctic jokes.
• Byrd (Bird) art.
• Antarctic artist books.
• How to preserve/protect your collection.
• Should I insure my collection? And if so, with whom?
• Some well known Antarctic collections.
• Some little known Antarctic collections.
• What Antarctic biographies need doing.
• Collecting Antarcticana and the Internet.
• Collecting through ebay, abebooks.com, etc.
• What should I do with my collection?
• What's happening in the bookselling world?
• Buying and selling Antarcticana at auction.
• Collecting Antarctic art.
• Some Antarctic medals.
• Some Antarctic stamps.
• An Antarctic "Bucket List:" Books, Films, Collections, Places.
• Why can't you stop Antarctic explorers dressing up in women's clothes? Should they be?
• Antarctica in Advertising, including trade cards.
• Some Antarctic artifacts.
• Antarctic archival repositories in the US (will there ever be an American equivalent of SPRI? and should there be?)
• Frank Hurley—The Original 'Photoshopper.'
• Arctic explorers who went south…and vice versa.
• What came after Aurora Australis? Books, booklets and menus & other ephemera produced in the Antarctic. (Suggested by Bob Karrow)
• Some dustjackets from 1900-1950. (Suggested by Seamus Taaffe)
• Antarctic postcards. (Suggested by Seamus Taaffe)
• Physicians who headed south. (Inspired by Isobel Williams)
• Scott took a copy of Shackleton's Heart of the Antarctic on his polar journey. Where do you suppose that book is today?
Some New Ones Any suggestions?:
• Sites of Antarctic interest in Scotland.
• Scottish Antarctic explorers
• What got me started (on collecting Antarctic books)