Frank Hurley is best known today as a photographer and film
maker. His major documentary films include 'The Home of the
Blizzard', 'In the Grip of the Polar Pack Ice', 'Sir Ross Smith's
Flight' and 'Pearls and Savages', while his photographs of Douglas
Mawson's Australasian Antarctic Expedition, Ernest Shackleton's
Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition and the two World Wars have
been so widely exhibited and reproduced that in many cases they are
the principal means by which we have come to see those
world-historical events. Yet there is another source, so far little
known to the public, which also gives us a startling sense of the
presence of the past: it is Hurley's voluminous manuscript diaries,
only brief extracts from which have so far been published.
Originally written in the field in Antarctica, South Georgia,
England, France, the Middle East, Papua and Australia, and later
raided and revised for his many publications and stage
performances, they have survived years of world travel and are now
carefully preserved in the archives of the National Library of
Australia in Canberra and the Mitchell Library in Sydney. This
illustrated edition of his diaries presents Frank Hurley in his own
words, explores his testimony to these significant events, and
reviews the part he played in imagining them for an international
public.
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