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Ebook available to libraries as part of
The stories we tell, published or otherwise, condition our mountain experiences in practice and reinforce cultural memory and representation. Yet, as this book and the authors within it set out to demonstrate, if we look beyond the boundaries of this ‘singular white history’ there is a rich diversity of stories to tell. This volume contributes to a growing body of scholarship that calls for a heterogeneity of voices in mountain memoir genres. For the first time, this diverse scholarship interrogates how mountaineering literary and media culture impact bodies, spaces, and places, in order to nuance how commodification intersects across social categories and is embodied in multi-dimensional ways. In this volume, we explore a burgeoning tradition of mountaineering literature, of cinema and of memoir to appreciate difference, beyond the habitual heroic, white male, adventurer that dominates screens and bookshelves. Through exploring multidimensional axes of social differentiation from gender, race, class, and age to dis/ability and sexuality, the book will demonstrate how commodification is embodied through representation in mountaineering literature, media, film and memoir in mountaineering spaces. Amongst our aims, this book intends to understand how multiple social dimensions overlap and work to produce independent systems of exclusion and inclusion that focus on untraditional ways to be a mountaineer.
Jenny Hall is Senior Lecturer in Tourism and Events at York Business School, York St John University.
Martin Hall is Senior Lecturer and Course Leader for Film and Media Studies at York St John University.
List of Figures Notes on Contributors Acknowledgements |
Introduction Hall and Hall |
Commodification and the Mountain |
1. Fiona Mossman: Scripted Summits: Book History, Mountaineering, and the Experiences of Janet Adam Smith (1905-1999) |
2. Martin Hall – Tommy Caldwell’s The Push: Climbing, Edgework and Media Perceptions of Risk |
3. David Lombard: Thinking with a Mountain: A Narratological and Rhetorical Analysis of the Haptic Sublime in Jon Krakauer’s Mountaineering Memoirs |
4. James N. Maples and Michael J. Bradley: Transforming the Dirtbag Label in Kentucky’s Red River Gorge |
5. Sarah Ives: Decolonizing Mountain Writing: Gender, Race, and the Mini-Memoirs of the Digital Age |
Intersectional perspective of Mountaineering |
6. Anandarup Biswas: Bengal’s Encounter With the Himalaya: Mountaineering Beyond Conquest |
7. Emma Gleadhill: ‘Upon the whole I expect he took me for an aventurière’: British women Grand Tourists’ accounts of mountains and mountaineering |
8. Sarah Lonsdale: ‘The Woman Business’: Dorothy Pilley’s Climbing Days |
9. Agnieszka Kaczmarek: Wanda Rutkiewicz and Ewa Matuszewska: Deliberations on the auto/biographical 'Na jednej linie (On One Rope)' |
10. Jenny Hall - Julie Tullis: Gender and the emotional labour of climbing the ‘Mountain of Mountains’ |
Embodying The Mountain |
11. Ben Garlick: The Total Mountain: Nan Shepherd and the Virtual Qualities of Landscape |
12. Anna Holman: The Representation of Play in Joe Simpson’s Touching the Void and Paratexts |
13. Christopher Kocela: Walking Mountains: Zen practice and ecological awareness in Peter Matthiessen’s The Snow Leopard |
14. Paul Gilchrist: Fatherhood, emotional (dis)entanglements and adventurous masculinities: Ben Fogle on Everest |
Conclusion Hall and Hall |