Annapurna, week 7

I think the Annapurna expedition really shaped the new golden age of mountaineering. In the 1950’s mountaineering is shifting from a climbing era of veterans to a climbing era of adventurists. The french climbing establishment assembled a great team. It seems as though they chose people who were more into adventure than the nationalistic war…

Week 7

“Social Climbing on Annapurna” forced me to add an extra dimension to mountaineering that I had not considered, that being that it can not be above political or social discussions. I would prefer to gaze at the Wanderer as the first description, that being one individual above the problems of men and women, only on…

Anapurna

Social Climbing on Annapurna did a great job of ruining Herzog’s book. I read the book thinking that Herzog was a great man; humble, brave, and a great leader. Since reading Julia Rak’s argument I am conflicted. It is hard to deny Rak’s arguments against Herzog and the elitist culture surrounding mountaineering. I had many…

Week #7 Response

I feel that the readings for this week are a kind of high point in the class. In Fallen Giants the final first successful ascent of Everest is documented with the recounting of Hillary and Tenzing reaching the top after decades of various international failed attempts. Then we also read one of, if not the,…

The White Spider: Conquering the Impossible

Heinrich Harrer’s, The White Spider, was an extremely enjoyable and gripping read for myself. Perhaps because I had not yet heard of any of the attempts in detail, and was oblivious to the drama that has been faced on the Eiger, but I found myself not being able to put the book down at certain…

Week 6 The White Spider

The sport of mountaineering is a very individualistic sport.  The reason for climbing mountains and the reason why mountaineers do the things they do is therefore just as individualistic as the sport itself.  Throughout this semester we have tried time and time again to pin down the reason to why people climb, why they risk their…

The White Spider

steering away from the pure historical narrative of mountaineering and its implications of masculinity and imperialism, The White Spider provides us with a two in one punch of a book as it functions as a historical narrative of the Eiger and the many people that tragically died trying to climb this iconic mountain. It functions…

Week Six

The title of Heinrich Harrer’s book, The White Spider, evokes emotion on its own without knowing anything about what the story is about. One could assume based on the title that there is some amount of danger involved due to the fact spiders are not exactly considered friends to human and have been prone to…

Cliffhangers

I honestly can say that I disagree with much of what Bruce Barcott has to say about mountaineering- that may be because of my personal bias, but I can’t separate it from my opinion on this topic. On the other hand I do agree with some of his generalizations, but I think he tends to…

Cliffhangers, week 6

In Cliffhangers, Barcott states how tragedy drives narratives.  Courage and passion are two themes that stuck out for me this week.  Cliffhangers in a simple way, explains how stories like Harrer’s experience on the North Face of the Eiger became one of the most well know pieces mountaineering literature.  Barcott says a mountain climb is…