South by South: New Zealand and the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration
By (Author) Charles Ferrall
Te Herenga Waka University Press
Te Herenga Waka University Press
9th September 2025
New Zealand
General
Non Fiction
Australasian and Pacific history
Paperback
Width 152mm, Height 232mm, Spine 20mm
Joseph Kinsey is not a name many of us know or not as well as we know the name Robert Falcon Scott.
But from his base in Christchurch, Kinsey book and art collector, philanthropist, science enthusiast, businessman forged deep connections with the Antarctic expeditions and the explorers themselves through his tireless work as the agent for various expeditions. Two other New Zealanders also formed close friendships: Charles Bowen, a former politician, and Wellington lawyer Leonard Tripp, to whom Shackleton declared: I love you as David and Jonathan loved.
South by South tells the story of New Zealands role in the Heroic Age, that wave of exploration beginning at the end of the nineteenth century in which men set out to traverse the continent of Antarctica and, if they survived, to bring home their findings. The members of this New Zealander triumvirate were all believers in the British Empire, but the southern voyages were to an uninhabited land.
South by South brings to light many letters, newspaper articles, and pieces of official correspondence, much of which has not been published before, during the five expeditions of 19011916: the Discovery, Nimrod, Terra Nova, Aurora, and Endurance. In particular, Scotts letters to Kinsey and Shackletons to Tripp tell of their hope, despair, exhaustion, and deep gratitude for their friendship. What they and the explorers wrote was influenced by nineteenth-century adventure stories which conveyed the Imperialist ideals of the time. If the impending conflict of 191418 was a very literary war, this was very literary exploration.
Charles Ferrall is an associate professor at Te Herenga WakaVictoria University of Wellington. Among his books are Modernist Writing and Reactionary Politics (2001); The Trials of Eric Mareo (2002), co-written with Rebecca Ellis; East by South: China in the Australasian Imagination (2006), co-edited with Paul Millar and Keren Smith; Juvenile Literature and British Society 18501950 (2009), co-written with Anna Jackson; Henry Lawson in New Zealand (2012); How We Remember: New Zealanders and the First World War (2014), co-edited with Harry Ricketts; and Remembering Gallipoli: Interviews with New Zealand Gallipoli Veterans (2015), co-edited with Christopher Pugsley.