2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-6443.2011.01417.x
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A Vertical World: The Eastern Alps and Modern Mountaineering

Abstract: New sporting practices of modernity were products of complex dynamics of cultural remaking. Most accounts of the emergence of alpinism describe the new activity as part of modernization. As ways of seeing mountains changed, so did ways of moving in them. This involved a sharp break with the British gentlemanly preference for climbing without technical assistance. Modernists and alpinists found a new common ground in the Ostalpen of Tirol, a place commonly represented as one of the most traditional and Catholic… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…alpinism" as climbers experienced the steepness, ecstatic physicality, new technologies, and "modernity" of the discovery of Alpine "vertical landscapes". 6 Early mountaineering reflected Victorian values in combination, increasingly, with a pioneering imperialist spirit. Similar attitudes could be found elsewhere, 3 in New Zealand for example, characterized by its growing sense of a distinctive colonial character.…”
Section: Historians Have Concentrated On What Klein Called the "Key T...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…alpinism" as climbers experienced the steepness, ecstatic physicality, new technologies, and "modernity" of the discovery of Alpine "vertical landscapes". 6 Early mountaineering reflected Victorian values in combination, increasingly, with a pioneering imperialist spirit. Similar attitudes could be found elsewhere, 3 in New Zealand for example, characterized by its growing sense of a distinctive colonial character.…”
Section: Historians Have Concentrated On What Klein Called the "Key T...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The on-line bibliographical database Scopus includes >320 papers mentioning rock climbing in their titles and >380 papers mentioning mountaineering (state as at mid-May, 2020; some of these papers deal with geoheritage, but the majority do not). In the literature, mountaineering is often treated in regard to industry and society [57][58][59] and places [60,61], but chiefly to personalities (physiology and emotions) [62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69][70][71]. Environmental effects are also documented [72,73].…”
Section: Climbing Activitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…18 peter Hansen has noted that mountaineering's heyday in the nineteenth century was a result of the rise of the middle class and its increased interest in outdoor sports, a form of "actively constructed . .…”
Section: Mountaineering and Modernitymentioning
confidence: 99%