Artists and writers from the colder climes of northern Europe have long
felt the lure of the South of the continent. Goethe was revitalized by
his encounters with Mediterranean culture on his journey to Italy.
Nietzsche took flight southwards to begin his life anew, while DH
Lawrence sought the health-giving southern sun in Sicily and Sardinia.
But across the centuries, other outposts of the South have provoked a
similar obsession. The South Seas cast a spell over figures such as
Herman Melville, Robert Louis Stevenson and Paul Gauguin. The American
Deep South and the southermost reaches of Latin America have been
celebrated in the works of writers as diverse as John Muir, Jack Kerouac
and Jorge Luis Borges, while the Great White South of the Antarctic has
provided the backdrop to the darkest imaginings of Coleridge, Poe and
Lovecraft. Moving between geography and mythology, literature and
history, this book examines the idea of the South as a symbol of freedom
and escape, as well as the depository for many of our deepest
unconscious fears and desires.