2024, Publikationen

Paul Gilchrist, Peter Hansen and Jonathan Westaway (eds.) (2024): Other Everests. One mountain, many worlds. Manchester University Press: Manchester.

hundred years after the tragic 1924 British Everest expedition, this collection explores the wider social and cultural history of the mountain.

Mount Everest looms large in the popular imagination. Since the deaths of mountaineers George Mallory and Andrew Irvine in 1924, histories of the mountain have overwhelmingly focused on the mythologies of western male adventure and conquest. But there are many more stories waiting to be told.

Other Everests brings together new voices and perspectives on the historical and cultural significance of Everest in the modern world. The book shines a light on the overlooked role of local people and high-altitude workers, while also revealing the significant contributions women have made to climbing the mountain and writing its history. It explores the depiction of Everest in a range of media and investigates how the forces of nationalism and commercialism have shaped many different ‚Everests‘.

After years of exploitation, Indigenous people are now reclaiming Mount Everest in the twenty-first century. Other Everests re-examines the past and present of the world’s highest peak, presenting an exciting vision of what Everest might become in the future.

 

Introduction: one mountain, many worlds – Peter H. Hansen, Paul Gilchrist and Jonathan Westaway
1 The immovable goddess: the long life of Miyo Lang Sangma – Ruth Gamble
2 Naming Mount Everest: mountain cartography and languages of exonymy – Felix de Montety
3 Re-activating the expeditionary archive – Felix Driver
4 The benefit of chocolate and cold tea: equipping early British Everest expeditions – Sarah Pickman
5 Far away frontiers and spiritual sanctuaries: Occidental escapism in the high Himalaya – Tim Chamberlain
6 Seeing histories from the margins: an Indigenous labour force on Everest, 1921-53 – Jayeeta Sharma
7 Women on Everest: a summit beyond – Jenny Hall
8 Rewriting Irvine into Everest: Audrey Salkeld and Julie Summers – Anna Saroldi
9 Expecting hypermasculinity from a woman mountaineer: Wanda Rutkiewicz’s ascent of Everest – Agnieszka Irena Kaczmarek
10 The ‚Slovenian‘ Everest 1979: a small nation and the highest mountain in the world – Peter Miksa and Matija Zorn
11 Reclaiming Everest: discontents, disasters and the making of a Nepali mountain – Ian Bellows
12 Sherpa’s Everest and expedition conglomerate – Young Hoon Oh
13 The numbers game on Mount Everest: new ‚lows‘ on the world’s highest mountain – Pradeep Bashyal and Ankit Babu Adhikari
14 Digital media on Everest: practices, imaginations and futures – Jolynna Sinanan
15 Thin ice, thin air – Yvonne Reddick
16 Everests on stage: contemporary theatre’s contribution to decolonising the mountain – Jonathan Pitches
Index