Few things suggest rugged individualism as powerfully as the solitary mountaineer testing his or her mettle in the rough country. Yet the long history of wilderness sport complicates this image. In this surprising story of the premier rock-climbing venue in the United States, Pilgrims of the Vertical offers insight into the nature of wilderness adventure. From the founding era of mountain climbing in Victorian Europe to present-day climbing gyms, Pilgrims of the Vertical shows how ever-changing alignments of nature, technology, gender, sport, and consumer culture have shaped climbers’ relations to nature and to each other. Even in Yosemite Valley, a premier site for sporting and environmental culture since the 1800s, elite athletes cannot be entirely disentangled from the many men and women seeking recreation and camaraderie. Following these climbers through time, Joseph Taylor uncovers lessons about the relationship of individuals to groups, sport to society, and nature to culture. He also shows how social and historical contexts influenced adventurers’ choices and experiences, and why some became leading environmental activists—including John Muir, David Brower, and Yvon Chouinard. In a world in which wild nature is increasingly associated with play, and virtuous play with environmental values, Pilgrims of the Vertical explains when and how these ideas developed, and why they became intimately linked to consumerism.
What is the role of science in the history of these preserves? Of politics? What purposes do they serve: Conservation? Education? Reverence toward nature? Tourist pleasure?
Using the cultural history of Oregon's Nestucca Valley as a case study, Taylor illustrates the wisdom of seasonal labor, the complex relationships between work and identity, and the resilience of rural economics across a century of almost ...
In the mountainous Andes, the journey of pilgrimage articulates a horizontal social space across the predominantly vertical physical space over which the pilgrim travels. In pre-Columbian pilgrimage this emphasis on connecting the ...
Risk”. and. Legacies. of. Selfhood. in. Contemporary. White. Western. Men's. Memoir. Linda Karell DOI: 10.4324/9781351174282-8 Readers of contemporary Western writing will inevitably come across one or another of Ivan Doig's two memoirs ...
Taylor, Pilgrims of the Vertical, 44–47, 58–59; Brower, “Environmental Activist, Publicist, and Prophet,” 33–34. 36. Taylor, Pilgrims of the Vertical, 59–61; Brower to Morgan Harris (mountain climber), November 13, 1936, Box 5, ...
intertextually, 'pilgrim' tends to be used as a modifier simply to add gravitas to the word 'tourist', rather than, ... graves – I have a particular set of experiences in mind, directly related to what we might term 'the vertical axis'.
Although both Harding and Robbins wanted to continue, the others were less eager, and the team retreated, intending to return soon. Yet no one was to lay hands on the cliff for two more years. Robbins and Gallwas didn't forget about the ...
The unity expresses itself in the vertical bonding of the Chinese pilgrims with their Tibetan masters, ... The self-subverting dichotomy of the pilgrim's vertical bonding with his or her Tibetan master and the horizontal divisiveness of ...
In the case of the Twos, the practice of 'vertical reading' is signalled rather differently. The cantos are not marked by multiple textual echoes in ... Inferno ii is infused with the pilgrim's fears and doubts concerning the journey he ...
Pilgrimage and Tourism in Rocamadour, France Deana L. Weibel ... Jean, 87 Veronica, 21–22 Veronique (Compostela pilgrim), 85 Verpooten, Jan, 124 vertical layout, 104, 105 vertical pilgrimage, 120, 165 vertigo, 6–7, 103; height, 165–66; ...