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In: Journal of The Royal Central Asian Society, Band 25, Heft 2, S. 260-267
In: Routledge focus on tourism and hospitality
In: Routledge focus
In: Soldier: the British Army magazine, Band 68, Heft 11, S. 88-90
ISSN: 0038-1004
In: Inflexions, Band 3, Heft 2, S. 35-37
In: Land use policy: the international journal covering all aspects of land use, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 167-176
ISSN: 0264-8377
In: Global Culture and Sport Series
1) Introduction: Contextualizing Gender and Transformational Spaces in Mountaineering Adventure Sports and Leisure -- PART I: TRANSFORMING THE PAST: GENDER AND MOUNTAINEERING HISTORIES -- 2) 'That is the lady I saw ascending Snowdon, alone': Pioneering women mountaineers of the nineteenth century -- 3)Troubling the silences of adventure legacies: Junko Tabei and the intersectional politics of mountaineering -- 4) "There is no manlier sport in the world". How hegemonic masculinity became constitutive of excellence in mountaineering -- PART 2: TRANSFORMING EXPERIENCE: INTERSECTIONAL MOUNTAIN PLACES AND SPACES -- 5) Reflexive duoethnography: A dialogic exploration of disability and participation in outdoor adventure activities and a mountain climber academic -- 6) "The whole trip I basically had to hide": A Goffmanian analysis of Erin Parisi and negotiating the gendered mountaineering space -- 7) Exploring the gendered and racialized experiences of Mexican mestiza -women mountaineers through the rhizomatic body -- 8) (Re)naming routes: A tale of transformation in the outdoor rock climbing community. -- PART 3: TRANSFORMING LEADERSHIP AND PARTICIPATION: CLIMBING THE MOUNTAIN OF EQUITY -- 9) A mountain still to climb: Developing gender parity pathways for women in mountaineering leadership and the role of men -- 10) A Critical Postfeminist lens as a tool for Praxis -- 11) Leave Tracks: Gender, Discrimination, and Resistance in Mountaineering -- PART 4: TRANSFORMATIONAL PEDAGOGIES: CREATING NEW SPACES TO BE A MOUNTAINEER -- 12) Into the Mountain: challenging hegemonic discourses of mountaineering and expanding the relational field -- 13) Transformational Learning on the Journey to Mountain Leadership -- 14) An Autoethnographic Writing of Mountain Skill Courses.
In: Indian and foreign review: iss. by the Publ. Div. of the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, Gov. of India, Band 20, Heft 22
ISSN: 0019-4379
In: The Pacific review, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 19-24
ISSN: 0951-2748
In this article, the author narrates the experience of ascending the mountain Chandra Bhaga 13 (CB 13) in the Himalayas as well as the problems (especially environmental and social) connected with Himalayan mountaineering in India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan and China. The Indo-Pakistan conflict on Kashmir is briefly mentioned. (DÜI-Sen)
World Affairs Online
In: The Pacific review, Band 4, Heft 1, S. 19-24
ISSN: 1470-1332
During and after panedic COVID 19 attacked Indonesia, tourism sectior has fallen sharply. Adventure tourism is one of travel activities that considering save to do during this pandemic, especialy mountaineering activitiues. This research has the aims to analyze the influence of push factor and pull factor on mountaineering participation in Gunung Slamet. The research conducted to 90 climber whose climb to Gunung Slamet through Bambangan Gate in Purbalingga. The reults show that there is positive influence of push factor and pull factor to mountaineering participation in Gunung Slamet. This result can be recommnendation for Banyumas Government as administrator to develop promotional strategy through facility fullfillment for climber and increase use of social media to attract tourist
BASE
In: Leisure sciences: an interdisciplinary journal, Band 44, Heft 7, S. 939-958
ISSN: 1521-0588
In: Journal of historical sociology, Band 24, Heft 4, S. 519-548
ISSN: 1467-6443
AbstractNew 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 locations in central Europe. In mountaineering, we may imagine a similar turn to that of artistic modernists. This article explores how the region pulled together two apparently oppositional cultural forces. In this process, there is no simple grand narrative of modernization that creates an international sporting culture of the mountains: on the one hand, in popular culture, the Ostalpen and the Dolomites in particular represented premodern forms of religiosity, from Orientalist aesthetics to the most conservative styles of Catholicism; on the other hand, the region served as a proving ground for the most technologically advanced and self‐consciously modern forms of alpinism.