Install

Get the latest updates as we post them — right on your browser

Today's paper. Last Updated: 05/16/2012

Blogger Shows Life in Antarctic Wilderness

An envelope featuring ornate postmarks from Bellingshausen Station.
Olga Stefanova / For MT

An envelope featuring ornate postmarks from Bellingshausen Station.

Click to view previous image Image 1 of 3 Click to view next image

On the bottom of the world, a young woman sends out messages about penguins, walruses and an isolated, though fascinating, place.

Olga Stefanova, a 28-year-old filmmaker from Moscow, is the only woman on the 55th Russian Antarctic Expedition, a yearlong stay in the frozen continent of Antarctica.

Housed in the westernmost point of Antartica at the Bellingshausen research station, she is providing rare insight into life in the frozen south in her blog “Antarctica. Letters home” (ostefanova.livejournal.com).

“Today started with a massive penguin invasion into our station,” Stefanova wrote in the blog, which has quickly grown in popularity.

She is making a film about the polar scientists who work there and at other stations. Russia has five different stations in Antarctica, and a handful of other countries are represented there.

“It took me several months to get used to new conditions. I suffered from drowsiness and weakness, which I couldn’t overcome for a long time,” Stefanova wrote in an e-mail interview about life on the coldest, driest and windiest continent. “As for other phenomena, like the heavy winds, absence of sun and huge snowdrifts, I quickly got used to them.”

As well as describing what she sees and feels, the blog shows various tidbits about Antarctic life, from what residents collect as souvenirs, such as the postmarks from different stations, to a satirical take on the ongoing international debate over the ownership of the continent.

She quotes from Vladimir Kiryanov, a veteran polyarnik, or polar explorer or scientist, who tells in one book of how Russian scientists created their own countries in the Antarctic. One declared his land the country of Immortia, another founded the Dukedom of Pinsk after the Belarussian town that he hailed from while another explorer, Yury Kharchuk, gave it the “humble name of the Principality of the Treasure Hunter Yury Kharchuk.”

Currently, Antarctica is claimed by a number of countries but does not officially belong to any nation.

Besides working on her own film, Stefanova took part in the Antarctic winter film festival for the approximately 4,000 inhabitants of the continent. Each film had to include the phrase, “Do you want to buy a dog?” and a temperamental cook. Stefanova’s film, “One Day of Vladimir Fyodorovich’s Life,” won the best camerawork prize at the festival.

Stefanova is the only woman among the team, and she says sometimes it is not easy.

Women were not allowed to go on any of the expeditions until the 1960s, and although there are women at other stations (Stefanova has attended a hen’s party at another station and invited a Chilean friend to take part in a banya at Bellingshausen Station) they are still a small minority.

“Some tension occurs at times as a result of misunderstandings, but in general everyone in the team supports me,” Stefanova writes. “After all, it’s better to be the only woman among men than the only man among women.”

An Orthodox Church opened in 2004 at Bellingshausen Station and “when it’s getting really hard, I just go there and feel much better,” Stefanova writes.





This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment


Discussion
The Moscow Times welcomes your comments and invites you to discuss topics with other readers. Your comment will be posted automatically to enable a live discussion. If you aren't familiar with our comments policy, you can read it here.

If you're a registered user, you can start typing your comment below. If not, take a moment to sign up. and then return to the article.

If your comment doesn't appear, contact us by using our web form.

Comments

Comments via Facebook



Also in Arts & Ideas

Night at the Museum Returns, Fewer Lines Expected

Nearly 200 of Moscow's museums, parks, theaters and cultural centers are staying open after hours Saturday as part of the city's sixth annual Night at the Museum project. Most participating venues will be open from 6 p.m. until midnight, some much later, and will offer free admission.  

Writers Turn the Week Around With Bulvar Walk

Officially it was called a Test Walk With Poets and Writers. Although, I already have to back down from that. As novelist Boris Akunin stated on Dozhd television Sunday night, nothing in this May 13 march from Pushkin Square to Chistiye Prudy was organized. "It happened on its own," he said.

World Chess Championship Starts in Moscow

Though it involves an Indian and an Israeli, the three-week-long World Chess Championship match now going on in Moscow also provides a glimpse of the weird and politically connected Russian chess scene.

Mixed Results as Bolshoi Theater's 'Jewels' Debuts

No dance troupe in the world, even today's New York City Ballet, the company which George Balanchine founded in 1946 and led until his death 39 years later, is likely to do real justice to all three of the diversely styled ballets that the choreographer collectively titled "Jewels."

In the Spotlight

This week, Vladimir Putin invited rapper Timati and lion-taming brothers Edgard and Askold Zapashny to his big day. On the other side of the barricades, it girl and media personality Ksenia Sobchak won the activist's badge of pride by finally getting arrested.

How Actors and Riot Police Make Bad Partners

A couple of weeks ago a twist of fate made me a player in a production created by Donatas Grudovich. It was a show called "Disco Dictatorship: We Will Live to See Endorphins in Nameless Anonymity," and it included scenes of police abuse and other topical themes.



print


Comments

This article has no comments.

Be the first to leave a comment





Most Read
MarketGid