A story has developed around the historic disaster of the passenger liner
Titanic with which certain elements are inextricably linked, say Brown, McDonagh and Shultz. These include not only the magnitude of the disaster and the haughty claim of the ship's unsinkability, but also the "nemesis of
Mother Nature's iceberg". There are numerous non-fiction books and novels about
Titanic. But it takes two to make a collision, says Philip Morrison in a review of a book by
marine biologist Richard Brown. In
Voyage of the Iceberg, Brown describes the disaster from the perspective of the iceberg and, moreover, the possible journey of the iceberg along nature and people in the far north. A counterpart in poetry is the poem "The Iceberg" by the Canadian
Charles G. D. Roberts. In the first-person perspective, the iceberg, an 'alp afloat,' narrates its life journey from its formation on the glacier to its dissolution in the ocean. In the collision, the broadside of
Titanic creeps under the iceberg, which pierces and tears open the hull with a submerged horn. The funnels crash against the rocky slope and the huge mass of the iceberg sinks down onto the ship, wiping it out.
Metaphorical use , 1912). Not only
Titanic, which stands for luxury, but also the iceberg has inspired numerous authors and visual artists. It was common to depict the iceberg as a
monster in
caricatures. Religious authors denounced a lack of respect for God and the forces of
nature, which included the iceberg. The ice warnings that had been ignored by
Titanic appeared as "
the writing on the wall". Meanwhile, in leftist publications, the iceberg was sometimes compared to the
proletariat: It was causing
capitalism (
Titanic) to sink. As a product of a
Belfast shipyard,
Titanic could also be seen as a symbol of Protestant pride – which was in danger of being sunk by the cool "iceberg dynamics" of
Irish nationalism. The building and
sinking of Titanic took place at the same time as the debates on Irish
Home Rule. In the radio play
The Iceberg (1975),
Stewart Parker, a Northern Irish
playwright, allows the ghosts of two shipyard workers who perished during the construction of
Titanic to speak about the
Northern Ireland conflict. Author Stephen Kern sees an analogy between the
Titanic disaster and the
Sarajevo assassination that helped trigger the
First World War: The icebergs on the steamer's route would stand in an analogy to the eight assassins who waited for
Franz Ferdinand's carriage. In 2012, for example, Shetsova compared Russia under
Putin to
Titanic in search of its iceberg. New metaphors or perspectives place the fatal iceberg, for example, within the context of
climate change. The sea ice is receding and the melting of the Greenland
glaciers will initially create more icebergs. However, due to global warming, the probability of large icebergs reaching the 45th parallel and endangering shipping there is decreasing.
Thomas Hardy in
Cyprus As early as 1912, the British poet
Thomas Hardy poetically processed the relationship between the ship and the iceberg, in a highly unusual way that defies all expectations. In the much-cited
poem "
The Convergence of the Twain", there is neither suffering nor death; instead, a blind, senseless will is at work, which, in the sense of
Schopenhauer, has replaced the personal God of the Bible as a deity. In "The Convergence of the Twain", Hardy first imagines the luxurious ship on the ocean floor. While people were building
Titanic, the iceberg was growing in nature. Then, on the night of the disaster, fate brought ship and iceberg together. In scholarly literature, explains Emerson Brown Jr., it has become a commonplace that Hardy's language used indicates
human sexuality. Nor does speaking about two shaken hemispheres uniting simply refer to the two hemispheres of the world. Rather, it goes back to the Greek comedy writer
Aristophanes: the gods divided the originally spherical human being into two parts as punishment, and hence comes his urge to unite in the sexual act. Furthermore, the poem alludes to marriage as it is discussed in the
Gospel of Matthew between the
Pharisees and
Jesus. Man and woman, for example, appear in it as no longer
twain, but
one flesh, and the
creature of cleaving wing (in the King James translation) also refers to this. There are other erotic and Christian references in Hardy's poem. Thus Hardy sends the 1500 souls into the depths with an 'obscene pun', as
Meredith Bergmann puts it.
Consummation comes describes the sexual union of the ship, conceived as female, with the iceberg. But this line 33 also reflects the last words of the 33-year-old Jesus Christ:
consummatum est (It is finished). Hardy, an otherwise sympathetic author who lost two friends on
Titanic, did not write the poem at a great distance from the disaster, for the first manuscript is dated 24 April 1912 (nine days after the sinking). On 14 May, a matinée was held at
Covent Garden in London to raise money for the bereaved, and Hardy wrote
The Convergence of the Twain for the occasion. Emerson Brown Jr. wonders if the bereaved, who had just lost their loved ones, could appreciate Hardy's witty allusions – his ruthless artistry.
Folk and pop culture There are numerous allusions to
Titanic and its iceberg in American folk culture. In a song by the Dixon Brothers (1938), a band of
cotton mill workers from
South Carolina, the iceberg not only slashes the side of the ship but also cuts off
Titanic's pride. A more recent example is a song by the Mrs. Ackroyd Band (1999), in which a sad polar bear asks for news about the iceberg on which his family has been living. The iceberg appears with or without
Titanic in many popular representations and contexts, for example as a set of ice cubes in a thematically fitting form. In April 2021, the American comedy show
Saturday Night Live aired a sketch starring cast member
Bowen Yang as "The Iceberg that sank
Titanic". The sketch parodies the reactions of celebrities who have been involved in scandals. The iceberg sees himself as the one under attack, blames the ship, the ocean and the shipping company, claims that only 20 people died (after an initial claim of 30 deaths), and promotes his new music album.
Museal and miscellaneous , an attraction in the capital of
Northern Ireland A place of remembrance for
Titanic is the former site of the
Harland & Wolff shipyard that built her. Among other things,
Titanic Belfast, a conference centre and museum, opened
on the redeveloped site in the 2012 anniversary year. Local editor Tony Canavan regrets that looking at
Titanic Belfast reminds him of the appearance of an iceberg. (In fact, the building is meant to reflect the collision of iceberg and ship). near
Denver named after Titanic and the iceberg There is no 'monument' for the iceberg in the strict sense; it rarely appears on commemorative plaques for
Titanic. In Red Rocks Park (near
Denver, Colorado) there are two rocks named
Sinking Titanic and Iceberg. Large iceberg dummies can be seen at
Titanic museum in Branson, Missouri and
the one in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. They are located outside on the buildings, each of which is modelled on the appearance of
Titanic. In the museum in Pigeon Forge there is a large touchable ice installation (15 by 28 feet; 4.6 by 8.5 metres) meant to make the coldness of an iceberg tangible. In August 2021, the ice wall collapsed onto three visitors, resulting in their hospitalization. The Northland Discovery Boat Tours offer boat tours off the coast of
Newfoundland. When his boat approaches an iceberg, boatman Paul Alcock plays
the theme music from the 1997
Titanic movie. Some tourists laugh about it, others are moved. The icebergs are the most important reason for someone to go on his tour, he says. Lorraine McGrath from the tourism promotion board of the city of
St. John's in Newfoundland talks about the fascination that icebergs exert on those who see one for the first time. She is frequently asked by tourists, 'Is that the iceberg that sank
Titanic?' She replies in a good-humored manner, 'No, dear. That's a different one.' == Notes ==