Social climbing on Annapurna: gender in high-altitude mountaineering narratives.
Rak, Julie
SINCE 1950, ANNAPURNA has been known in climbing circles as one of
the world's most dangerous mountains to climb. At 8091 metres in
what was once a little-known part of Nepal, Annapurna is accessed from
the north by a valley that was unmapped and unknown even by the
villagers of Pokhara, its nearest town. It is swept constantly by
avalanches in the north. Its south face has the largest and most
difficult "big-wall" ice cliff in the Himalayas. Thus,
although its name means "the Provider" or "Goddess of the
Harvests" in Sanskrit, the hazards associated with Annapurna still
make it a difficult mountain to see up close, much less climb. Although
it is the tenth highest mountain in the world and the first mountain
above 8000 metres to be successfully climbed, Annapurna is also not as
well known to the general public as Mount Everest simply because it is
not the highest mountain in the world. But to mountain climbers,
Annapurna is the site of some of the greatest achievements in
high-altitude mountaineering. According to Reinhold Messner in
Annapurna: so Years of Expeditions in the Death Zone, Annapurna has
never become a fashionable mountain to climb but it remains a credible
goal for climbers who wish to push the limits of climbing (150) because
it is more difficult to climb than Everest or other "easy
eight-thousanders" (149). Even today, it is still considered to be
too dangerous and difficult a mountain for those with minimal experience
to attempt.
Unlike Everest or other less technically-demanding high mountains,
Annapurna is also seen by professional climbers as a "pure"
mountain unsullied by alpine tourism. Perhaps for this reason, Annapurna
has also been the subject of some of the best-known expedition
narratives in the world which have detailed some of the turning points
in the history of high-altitude mountaineering itself. Because it is not
Everest, with its status as the world's highest mountain, Annapurna
is an excellent site to begin an examination of the ways in which that
history is informed by another narrative thread: a history of gender in
high-altitude mountaineering accounts that surfaces in these narratives
but is rarely discussed directly within them.
In this paper, I examine the politics of gender in texts where it
is not possible to speak openly about gender at all. I look at accounts
of climbing Annapurna as complex formulations of identity, and
especially of gendered identity, which were not created by theorists,
philosophers, artists, career activists, or even professional writers.
Like the activity of mountain climbing itself, many of these texts
nevertheless have helped to shape what the developed world thinks about
nature, bodies, history, and heroism. What it means to be a man or a
woman in harsh circumstances is central to all of these concerns. And,
yet, there has never been scholarship which has treated the accounts of
expedition mountaineers as rhetorical and which deals with gender as a
social construction which men and women must negotiate, although there
are a growing number of critical works which do deal with the politics
of masculinity, imperialism, and racism in mountaineering more
generally. These narratives about climbing Annapurna can, therefore,
provide a test case for looking at how gender issues emerge where we
usually do not look for them, in texts that most critics are not
accustomed to thinking about as rhetorical at all.
In this study, I also want to answer the following questions: Why
are there so few feminist accounts concerning mountaineering, and why do
masculinity and racism in mountaineering often get discussed by critics
but the social construction of gender for women does not? One reason is
that expedition accounts follow a generic convention that is common to
almost all books produced about climbing: it is not possible to discuss
political matters openly, even though the uses and representations of
the body in wilderness environments are always politicalized and always
involve issues about power, knowledge, and pleasure (or pain). To
provide a framework for dealing with gender issues in light of this
context, I discuss narratives about Annapurna as part of what Sherry
Ortner has called the "bodily politics" (231) of high-altitude
climbing, where gendered struggles are played out indirectly as
controversies about the uses of the body in registers like proper
climbing style, heroism, and leadership during the transition from the
golden age of mountaineering and its use of siege-style climbing
techniques to alpine climbing style, with its emphasis on lighter
equipment and faster climbing techniques. Annapurna is a site of
important turning points in the gendered nature of this transition in
these expedition narratives: Herzog's Annapurna: The First Conquest
of an 8000-metre Peak (1952), Arlene Blum's account of the first
all-women's expedition to summit an 8000-metre mountain, Annapurna:
A Woman's Place (1980), Sir Chris Bonnington's account of the
first big-wall alpine climb in 1970 called Annapurna South Face (1971;
2001), and Reinhold Messner's history of Annapurna climbs (2000).
All of these books have much to tell us, I believe, about the ways in
which mountaineering is narrated within climbing culture and how ideas
about gender move far beyond that subculture to become (indirectly)
embedded within mass cultural formations worldwide.
Mountain Rhetoric
Before I turn to an analysis of the gender politics of climbing and
writing about Annapurna, it is necessary for me to lay some groundwork
for thinking about gender in the context of mountaineering as an
activity. First of all, it is time for the study of mountaineering
generally to take mountain writing into account as rhetoric and not just
for its ability to relay events and experiences. Bruce Barcott has
written that "mountaineering is the most literary of all
sports" (65), an observation that a number of critics have repeated
because writing does seem to be central to the activity itself. One of
the most compelling reasons why expedition narratives get written is
financial: expedition accounts help to pay expenses and are often
commissioned in advance, just as filmed accounts and interviews are.
These narratives also serve as ways for mountain climbers to prove their
worth in the mountaineering communities because they document the climb
itself and provide climbing advice for anyone who will repeat a route as
a type of "debriefing" (Mitchell 72-75). But, so far, there
have been few studies of expedition narrative rhetoric itself.
Expedition narratives are a way that mountaineers "talk" to or
about each other, and so they provide much more than factual
information. They are about social issues as well as about climbing,
because they tell other climbers not only how to climb a certain
mountain but how to be a climber too. Mountain rhetoric produces a
specific kind of climbing subjectivity which relates climbing to Western
notions of selfhood.
One of the important aspects of mountaineering rhetoric, therefore,
concerns its representations of gender in its production of
subjectivity. Many critics have noted that mountaineering has been one
of the key ways that modern, Western ideas about human activity, the
idea of the body and the linking of gender to ideas about nationalism,
colonialism, and race have been formulated. But the majority of
mountaineering narrative studies have focused on male mountaineers and
their experiences. There have been some histories of women climbers
which show that women have been climbing mountains at least since 1808,
(2) but these studies are mostly about bringing women into the
historical record. They are not concerned with figuring out how gender
works within the narratives of climbing and of self which women have
produced. The criticism about the role of masculinity in mountaineering
is, on the other hand, more detailed because mountaineering is part of a
culture of masculinity that has always been closely associated with
climbing and the outdoors. Climbing, particularly before the 1970s, was
a key way for modern men--and especially middleclass and upper-class
white men associated with imperial and colonial regimes--to imagine
themselves as men who are socially productive because they are engaged
in what is essentially an unproductive activity. Although this sounds
contradictory, the contradiction itself is what helped to make
mountaineering such a popular activity for men of leisure in the
aftermath of industrialization. As early as 1760, Horace Benedict de
Saussure--the first man to summit Mont Blanc in the Alps--was able to
make this connection. His Voyages dans les Alpes of 1779 contains the
Romantic ideology of masculinity that would fuel the dreams of mountain
climbers thereafter. In Voyages Saussure decides (without actually
consulting the local villagers of Chamonix who called the Alps
"montagnes maudites") that the local hunters who were his
guides do not climb on the basis of economic need but for "the
danger itself--the alternation of hope and fear, the continual agitation
that these emotions make in the soul" (Bernstein 31).
Saussure's insistence on a non-economic basis for climbing
moved the ideology of climbing away from rural necessity, where the
guides and hunters make a living by learning how to travel in the
mountains, to the idea that climbing is really about summiting the
mountain and not about work. This transference of mountaineering to the
domain of the soul linked mountain climbing and mountains to Romantic
ideas of the sublime already well known in England and Germany. (3)
Saussure's further association of climbing with masculine virtues
usually reserved for the description of heroic soldiers in battle also
helped to make the act of climbing an acceptable occupation for men
during times of peace. His description of climbing as a manly Romantic
ideal proved to be attractive to middle-class British outdoorsmen, who
saw themselves as heroes who still could conquer some part of the world
and claim it for the British Empire, with the help of loyal
"natives" to guide them. (4)
Mountaineering still draws on some of these ideas of masculine
primacy. For example, the question often put to climbers about why they
would ever want to climb a mountain points to the unproductive and
dangerous nature of the activity. As Richard Mitchell has pointed out,
answers to this question are often connected to Romantic ideas of the
sublime that make climbing a creative act or to the belief that climbing
returns people to "primal" selves muted by civilization
(152-53). As a result, high-altitude mountaineering is loaded with much
more Romantic symbolic value than other leisure activities. And since
climbing was literally and philosophically associated with
"high" ideals, other Romantic ideas about nationalism and the
nature of manhood became attached to it. As Susan Frohlick points out,
the narratives of high-altitude climbing in particular have also helped
to produce and change what masculinity means (87-88). The classic texts
of mountaineering feature the intense symbolism of a militarized push to
the empire's vertical limits, and, when the climbing takes place in
non-European locales, exotic descriptions of landscape and its
inhabitants also appear. Readers of these narratives learned about what
it was to be a heroic white man (who wasn't a soldier but an
adventurer) from these texts. They also learned how desirable it could
be to "master" an empire by exploring and claiming it
vicariously. After World War II, for instance, summiting the highest
peaks in the Himalayas became a way to prove to the British public that
Britain was still a powerful country in a symbolic sense even as its
empire began to shrink (Bayers 2-3). When the summit bid for Mount
Everest by Tenzing Norgay and Sir Edmund Hillary was deliberately set to
coincide with the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953, the
symbolism of a first ascent by two subjects of the British Empire and
the crowning of the symbol of British power made the ascent take on
imperial significance in the minds of the English public during the
post-war era (Morris 5).
With help from its expedition accounts, mountaineering became
central to ideals about cultural superiority and masculine heroism from
the beginning of the nineteenth century to the end of what is called the
golden age of high-altitude mountaineering in the 1950s, when all the
8000-metre peaks in the Himalayas had been climbed. Theodore Roosevelt
had already suggested to Americans in the nineteenth century that
mountaineering is a sport which is part of "the strenuous
life" of manly imperialism, an activity which could keep American
men virile as they sought to increase and then maintain American
dominance overseas. Many Americans, until mid-century, clearly believed
him and took up mountain climbing (Bederman 184-85).
But, in Europe, national achievement became more essential than
imperial achievement for mountaineers after World War II. For countries
like France, Germany, and Japan which were conquered or defeated during
the war, high-altitude mountaineering was a symbolic way for its men,
who often had been forced to take part in military defeats, to regain
respect for their nations and to reinvigorate a national sense of male
power as well. The readers of these narratives, especially in France,
saw the successes of "their" heroes on mountain peaks as
symbolic of a national and masculine success which had eluded their
country in other ways.
In light of all this, the obvious way to study the cultural
meanings of high-altitude mountaineering has been to examine the links
between early high-altitude mountaineering and discourses of European
masculinity and to connect the discourse of mountain conquest and
exploration to imperialism and colonialism. (5) Studies of later eras in
high-altitude mountaineering and of mountaineering narratives about
those later climbs which took place in the Himalayas tend to focus on
other cultural issues than those connected to gender, most notably the
impact of commercialization on climbing. Even as older ideas about
masculine heroism began to mix uncomfortably with what Ortner calls the
"countercultural" style of high-altitude mountaineering of the
1970s, both discourses of masculinity resisted the commercialization of
Everest expeditions and the advent of mountain tourism. (6) Although
this is a major issue in mountaineering and one worthy of study, the
focus on commercialization seems to bypass any focus on gender issues.
The emphasis on masculinity in the gender politics of high altitude mountaineering which is found in critical literature has meant that
feminist studies of women climbers and women-centred expeditions are
still rare. Gendered analyses of high-altitude mountaineering that do
not have masculinity as the only focus are rarer still, whether the
subject at hand is the narrative of an expedition or the activity of
climbing itself. (7) As David Mazel has pointed out, a complete history
of women climbers does not even exist, much less a sustained treatment
of gender issues in women's mountaineering (xi-xii).
However, as I said briefly in the beginning of this paper, gender
does get discussed in expedition narratives in an indirect way, where it
appears as part of what Ortner calls "bodily politics." Bodily
politics displaces issues about gender onto controversies about climbing
leadership and style. It is a politics that makes its meaning gendered
by what it does not say about manliness, and by what--in contrast--it
shows about how to be a real man or (much less often) a real woman in
physically and emotionally trying conditions. Like Eve
Kosofsky-Sedgewick's characterization of "closetedness" a
condition that says through silence what "cannot" be said out
loud (3-6), bodily politics in mountaineering constitutes a set of
gendered assumptions about what good mountaineers are supposed to do,
and it informs whatever is said about anything else. Mountaineering
discourse is less about "rules" than it is about the
"style" of a climb, which "evolves out of an ongoing
process of discussion and negotiation" in the climbing community
(Mazel 17-18). And style, I argue, has assumptions in it which are
gendered. The indirect way in which conflict about gender issues appears
as debates about style explains why discussions of masculinity and
imperialism in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century mountaineering
fail to see the rhetorical construction of gender as significant. It
also explains why, with the exception of the work of Sherry Ortner and
Dianne Chisholm, feminist scholars of mountaineering have not addressed
why after the 1930s women writing about mountaineering had little or
nothing to say about gender issues. (8)
Or did they? The assumptions about what "proper" climbing
style in many memoirs about expeditions include a set of shared
understandings about gender which most often understand strength to be
male strength, heroism to be male heroism, leadership to be the heroic
model of a leader as an unchallenged decision-maker, and the community
of climbers to be--as it was called earlier in the twentieth century by
Gaston Rebuffat, a member of the 1950 Annapurna expedition--a
brotherhood of the rope (1999). But what does it mean to be part of a
"brotherhood" in mountaineering? Literally, "the
brotherhood of the rope" refers to the fact that when climbers are
roped together, they are responsible for each other's safety. The
use of a rope means that all climbers must work together as a team in
order to be successful and even--at times--to survive a dangerous
situation. But Rebuffat thought of "the brotherhood" in much
more philosophical and even spiritual terms. "The brotherhood of
the rope" refers as well to the whole community of mountain
climbers who share a common bond in their desire to do something that is
difficult and dangerous. Although he does not discuss this further (in a
way, evoking a term like "brotherhood" means that such matters
can be regarded as almost spiritual and, therefore, are felt rather than
analyzed), it is clear that "the brotherhood of the rope" is
what I would call a grammar for talking about--or not talking
about--profound bonds between men. It is a way of alluding to the
homosocial bonding of men in climbing without having to call attention
to the erotic nature of the bond. "The brotherhood of the
rope" becomes a substitute which actually creates masculinity as a
legitimate way to talk about homosociality. It provides a Romantic
vocabulary for masculinity so that it becomes possible to express how
good it felt for so many of these climbers to be a "true" or
"pure" man with other men, without speaking about erotic
attraction at all. In its very essence, then, this phrase turns any
discussion of gender politics in mountaineering (for men) into a
discussion about the activity of climbing itself, since it is impossible
to refer to its actual address, which is the nature of masculinity and
the limits of its expression. This is how detours in mountain
writing--and especially in Herzog's Annapurna--that seem to lead
away from an affirmation of "mountain masculinity" (including
so-called "feminine" behaviour like crying, being afraid, or
expressions of empathy) in fact reclaim any non-masculine action as an
affirmation of true manhood.
In its endorsement of the "maleness" of climbing, too,
the social grammar of "the brotherhood of the rope"
effectively excludes women from this fraternity, since the detour away
from manhood must lead not toward femininity but toward a more profound
expression of manhood. It is not possible for women to ever be part of
"the brotherhood of the rope." The name some female climbers
of the 1920s and 1930s gave to all-female rope teams, la cord&
feminine (the feminine rope), shows how climbers of that era (and even
some climbers at the present time) understood how exclusive the
brotherhood was and how important the idea of "the rope" is as
a symbol of communal bonding and identity. (9) But, over time, both
phrases fell into disuse. With their disappearance, there vanished too
any direct way of discussing issues about gender that still formed so
much of what mountaineering meant to its participants. Even today, the
assumptions contained in these more silent discourses of mountain
masculinity and femininity are rarely challenged head-on or even
discussed much in the literature about high-altitude mountaineering
itself. But as we will see in mountaineering writing about Annapurna
from the 1950s to the present time, ideas about gender and identity do
reappear in discussions about proper mountaineering style. As the origin
for so many heroic narratives about mountaineering and the inspiration
for many people who went on to become mountaineers themselves, Maurice
Herzog's text Annapurna is also the first text where unvoiced
concerns about masculinity, nationalism, and heroism appear in extended
discussions about proper style and leadership, and where
"unmanliness" becomes part of mountain masculinity. (10)
Annapurna: The Heroic Era
The importance of the Annapurna 1950 climb to the people of France
cannot be underestimated. When the members of the expedition stepped off
their plane in France, they were surprised by the size and enthusiasm of
the cheering throng which greeted them. All of France thrilled to the
story of what the expedition had accomplished. Early accounts of the
climb in Paris Match sold out immediately, and it took more than three
hundred lectures by expedition members to satiate the public appetite
for stories of the climb, the heroic summit bid, and the agonizing
descent where the injured team members had to be carried by porters for
weeks (Roberts 135-36). The myth of the Annapurna climb and its heroes
became vital to the postwar French who badly needed to see French
people, and especially French men, in a victorious light:
For the French, still stuck in the humiliation of World War
11, the conquest of the first 8000-meter peak ever climbed
became at once a matter of incalculable national pride. Indeed,
it could be argued that no triumph of sport in the nation's
history ever meant so much to its people. Nor was the glory
to be short-lived. Fifty years later, Annapurna still occupies a
sovereign place in the French soul. (Roberts 133)
The summit of Annapurna by the French team is still a landmark
achievement in high-altitude mountaineering. The team did not have
accurate maps of the Nilgiri region where Annapurna is located, and the
climbing team members, including the Sherpas, were the first non-local
people to enter the region where Annapurna was. It took weeks for the
team to even find the mountain, and by then they had less than two weeks
to climb it before the monsoon came. Climbing did not seem to be
possible at first. Although the French members of the team were all
excellent climbers in the Alps and some of them were widely thought to
be the best in the world, with one exception none of them had ever been
to the Himalayas before. No Sherpas in the party had any knowledge of
ice climbing, and most of them were not comfortable leading a climb in
deep snow. Relatively little was known about the correct medical
treatment for frostbite or exposure, and even less was known about the
problems with acclimatization at high altitudes. Although British
climbers on Everest had used supplemental oxygen as early as 1924, the
French team had not brought oxygen along and did not have a plan to
acclimatize its climbers.
Nonetheless, the team quickly established five alpine camps and a
base camp on the mountain, although many of the team members were too
ill to try to attempt the summit. But two of them did: after an
uncomfortable night at Camp V, on 3 June 1950 Maurice Herzog and Louis
Lachenal arrived at the summit of Annapurna. Lachenal pleaded with
Herzog to descend at once because Lachenal felt that his feet were
freezing, but Herzog, lost in what he later wrote was the national and
religious grandeur of the moment, had Lachenal snap photos of him with
the French flag held over his head. He was unwilling to leave a very
dangerous place. Finally they started down as a storm began to break.
But both men were beginning to experience frostbite in their hands and
feet, and they were probably beginning to experience the effects of
altitude sickness as well.
Somehow, both climbers staggered back to Camp V, where Rebuffat and
Terray did their best to help them. But their suffering did not end
there. The climbers started down to the next camp on the next day, but
Rebuffat and Terray became snow-blind and could not lead the party as
the storm closed in around them again. The climbers huddled in a
crevasse for the night with almost no equipment and no food, a situation
that was made worse when an avalanche buried their boots, ice axes, and
other equipment. When they emerged the next day they were near death,
but they were rescued by Marcel Shatz, another team member who was at
Camp IV just below them. The journey down the mountain was agonizing for
the team, particularly for Herzog and Lachenal, who were suffering from
gangrene. They both lost toes and Herzog lost most of his fingers to
amputation by the expedition doctor as they were carried down the
mountain on the backs of porters. When the French members of the
expedition finally got back to France, they were hailed as national
heroes for the summit victory and, particularly in the case of Herzog,
for courage in the face of extreme suffering.
The story of the 1950 Annapurna climb is dramatic. But
Herzog's expedition account turned the drama of the climb into an
enduring myth of suffering, heroism, and triumph over nearly impossible
odds. Herzog's image of himself as a leader plays a central role in
this myth. When the expedition members swear an oath of loyalty to the
expedition and the leader, Herzog sees this as the moment when he
becomes a leader:
They [the climbers] were pledging their lives, possibly, and they
knew it. They all put themselves completely in my hands....
[T]here is no feeling to equal this complete confidence of one
man in another, because it is the sum of so many feelings put
together. In that moment our partnership was born. It was for
me to keep it alive. (6)
Here, Herzog assumes that leadership is more than good management,
and it is here where "bodily politics" come into play, because
Herzog is clearly a leader of men. Although he ostensibly talks about
leadership and duty, his rhetoric of sacrifice and his reference to the
trust between men makes the moment homosocial, giving it spiritual
overtones and establishing an emotional basis for the relationship
between men which exceeds ordinary friendship.
Herzog's stress on duty is due in part to the type of climbing
that the French team had decided to employ. This style is called siege-
or expedition-style mountaineering, where climbers, Sherpas, and porters
carry loads to successively higher camps on the mountain. They supply
the camps so that a few members of the team can make a summit bid. Siege
mountaineering requires a significant amount of supplies and many
porters who can carry loads because it takes so long to establish the
string of camps. The leader of a siege-style climb has to be highly
organized in order to ensure that supplies keep flowing, and he or she
has to be able to manage large numbers of climbers and porters. The
success of siege mountaineering depends on climbers who are willing to
sacrifice their own climbing goals for those of the team, since not all
members of a siege team can make the summit. For this reason, most early
siege expeditions had the character of military campaigns (as the
mountain is literally besieged by large numbers of porters and climbers)
and were often led by military leaders, as Herzog himself had been
during World War II (Ortner 160-161). Loyalty to the leader, as in a
military campaign, was understood to be important to the success of this
type of climbing style, and this is why Herzog often portrays the other
climbers as a single unit who unequivocally follow him. Meanwhile, he
alone makes decisions at key points. Herzog frequently uses such terms
like "attack," "victory," or "retreat" to
describe climbing, and he calls a discussion about a climb "a
council of war" (68). Terms like these show that, for Herzog, a
mountain climber's loyalty to the climb and the leader is very much
like a soldier's loyalty to the cause and his commander. It is easy
to view this connection between climbing and militarism as an expression
of the need for masculine heroic strength and the need for patriotic
self-sacrifice. This is also why in Annapurna the other climbers rarely
stand out as individuals, appearing instead as masculine types. Terray
and Lachenal, for example, are introduced as "a couple of regular
steam engines" (2), a phrase that makes them appear to be
superhuman as well as interchangeable. Later on, the climber Jean Couzy agrees to carry loads up the mountain and forego a summit attempt.
Herzog makes Couzy's agreement into a general statement about the
right way to climb in a group: "[I]t is this admirable spirit of
self-denial which determines the strength of a team" (95). Terray
also gives up a summit chance, causing Herzog to feel guilty that he may
not be as heroic and selfless himself because he wants Terray, the
strongest climber, to be his summit partner (133).
Therefore, individuality in Annapurna is not thought to be a good
trait for mountaineers to have, except when the leader possesses it.
Loyalty, self-sacrifice, and obedience are seen as better traits, as
Herzog points out when he discusses how all the climbers had no thought
of profit. The effect of the passage is to make each man seem to be the
same and to be equally heroic: "From the start every one of them
knew that nothing belonged to him and that he must expect nothing on his
return. Their only motive was pure idealism; this was what linked
together mountaineers so unlike in character and of such widely
dissimilar origins" (5). This type of heroism may not appear to be
overtly gendered except for its use of military discourse, but in places
where heroism fails, gender and race politics do emerge. Lachenal chides
Rebuffat and Herzog by calling them "'pair of
sissies"' (87) for not continuing up the mountain more
quickly, which implies that they are not truly masculine because they
are not tough enough. In keeping with a view of many climbers at the
time that Sherpas are not true mountain climbers (Ortner 42-43),
Lachenal and Rebuffat complain later that they are not
"'beasts of burden'" (105) like the Sherpas and that
they shouldn't have to carry loads. When Terray retorts that the
two climbers are not acting like true Chamonix guides (which both of
them were) but like amateurs, he deliberately refers to the class
politics of climbing in France, where guides did heavier work than their
amateur clients. Lachenal replies to this in gendered terms when he
sarcastically accuses Herzog and Terray of being "'supermen,
real supermen, and we're just poor types"' (106). This
exchange shows that racial stereotypes about Sherpas (they are beasts
because they are not white and European) and assumptions about class
position (guides are also beasts when they are at home) were closely
related to ideas about masculine strength and sacrifice (real men would
not complain and would remember to be sacrificial) on the Annapurna
expedition, at least in Herzog's account. Weak or selfish climbers
were not real men or real mountaineers in a siege expedition. They could
be compared to a group of men who weren't "real" men
either because they were not European: the Sherpas. Although it might
have been possible to understand the Sherpas as sacrificial and
potentially as real men too, the pervasive belief that they could not
climb because they were not "real" mountaineers means that all
team members assume that the Sherpas would have nothing to
"sacrifice." The sacrifice which undergirds this understanding
of masculinity is the sacrifice of class position in the Himalayas for
the good of the team.
Herzog's account of his summit experience conforms to this
association of manly heroism with idealism. But his account of the
ascent does something else: it equates the (temporary) loss of ideals to
the loss of masculinity itself. On the final push to the summit, Herzog
underscores his courage and leadership ability. Lachenal asks if they
should go on in sub-zero temperatures. Herzog's "voice rang
out" (158) as he says that he would go on alone. Although Lachenal
simply says that he will follow him, Herzog sees this as a homosocial
moment of bonding: "[T]he die was cast. I was no longer anxious, I
shouldered my responsibility. Nothing could stop us now from getting to
the top ... we went forward as brothers" (158). At the summit
itself, Herzog interprets the summit bid in idealistic terms as a human
and a national achievement. As he takes out a French flag from his
knapsack and asks Lachenal to take pictures, he thinks: "[O]ur
mission was accomplished. But at the same time we had accomplished
something infinitely greater. How wonderful life would now become! What
an inconceivable experience it is to attain one's ideal and, at the
very same moment, to fulfil oneself" (159-60). As Lachenal begs him
to descend, Herzog keeps thinking of great mountaineers of the past and
his own childhood in the mountains of France. When he finally descends
(after he loses his gloves), he tells Terray that his emotion at the
summit was not egotistical, "[I]t was a victory for us all, a
victory for mankind itself" (164). Even against considerable
evidence that Lachenal did not share his feelings on the summit, Herzog
still saw his own experience as a paradigmatic experience of brotherhood
with his climbing partner and with all humankind. Later, he would
describe this experience as a religious one in the book L'Autres
Annapurna (Roberts 124). On the summit, Herzog is at his most heroic and
is most like a leader. He not only represents all mountaineers in
history, but he becomes a point of symbolic condensation of mankind
itself. His presence on the summit also symbolizes a national
achievement for the men of France, since he holds the French flag in his
hands and says afterward that "the victory that we had brought back
... would remain for ever [sic] with us as an ecstatic happiness and a
miraculous consolation. The others must organize our retreat and bring
us back as best they could to the soil of France" (187). Annapurna
ends with a picture of climbing as an expression of the highest human
ideals when Herzog writes: "[T]here are other Annapurnas in the
lives of men" (246).
Herzog's version of summit and the horrors of the descent
which followed placed the event within a tragic frame, where the climber
reaches the heights of joy, only to be sorely tested and, as we shall
see, transformed by suffering into a true hero. But Lionel Terray's
attempt a decade later to emulate the poetic highlight of Herzog's
book--when Herzog and his partner Louis Lachenal finally arrive jubilant
at the summit--detours away from the intended heroic effect in order to
recapture suffering, not triumph, as the ultimate expression of manly
heroism. In his memoir Conquistadors of the Useless, Terray meets Herzog
and Lachenal as they stagger down from the summit, disoriented from the
cold and exposure. Terray's self-assurance deserts him as he looks
at his friend Lachenal's frozen feet: "Annapurna, the first
eight-thousander, was climbed, but was it worth such a price? I had been
ready to give my life for the victory, yet now it suddenly seemed too
dearly bought" (288). But as Terray busies himself with helping
Lachenal, his best friend and climbing partner expressed no joy at being
on the first team to summit a Himalayan peak of more than 8000 metres:
"[T]hose moments when one [Lachenal] had expected a fugitive and
piercing happiness had in fact brought only a painful sense of
emptiness" (288-89). During the descent of the climbing team,
Lachenal would have to have part of his feet amputated, while Herzog had
to be carried down, losing his fingers to amputation even as the team
descended. Lachenal, one of best climbers in the world, would never be
able to climb seriously again. Rather than discussing this situation as
a tragedy, Terray describes this moment of his friend's career as a
deeply heroic:
I listened to him [Lachenal] in silence. The willpower and
sacrifice of my friends had crowned all of our efforts and dangers.
The action of the hero had fulfilled years of dream and
preparation. Those whose work, undertaken in the service of a pure
ideal, had made it possible for us to set out, were rewarded. And
with what typically French panache Herzog and Lachenal had set the
coping stone in this great arch of endeavour, showing the world
that our much-decried race had lost none of its immortal virtues!
(289)
"French panache" and "action of the hero"
hardly seem to be fitting ways to describe how Lachenal, having lost
much of his equipment, had fallen and how Terray had found him alone in
the snow, screaming that his feet were frozen. But Terray redeems this
detour through suffering and doubt as a detour for masculinity: it is
part of the suffering that a real man must undergo in order to reach his
goal. Meanwhile, Herzog was found wandering dreamily in sub-zero
temperatures without his gloves. He did not even seem to understand that
his hands were frozen irreparably and could not explain why Lachenal was
not with him. He could only talk about the summit victory, with his
"eyes shining" (287). He, too, routs his masculinity through
suffering so that, even as he is about to lose his hands and feet, he
appears to be more of a man (and more of a Frenchman) for his country
and for all mankind. However indirectly, this is how gender is
represented in this paradigmatic summiting of a Himalayan peak, as a
small detour, or gap, between the horror of the real and the belief in
an ideal.
During his own account of the descent, or as he calls it, "the
retreat," Herzog suspends this sense of his own power and destiny
so that he can more fully occupy the centre of what manhood is in a
Romantic sense. Herzog indirectly describes this process as a loss of
adulthood before he "grows" up by means of suffering and
receiving care from another man. When he endures painful injections for
frostbite and begins to experience gangrene as he is carried down by
porters, Herzog turns to Lionel Terray for comfort: "I whispered to
Lionel what a fearful ordeal I found it all, and begged him to hold me
close ... I howled and cried and sobbed in Terray's arms while he
held me tight with all his strength" (193).When he hears cracking
ice at night, Herzog is terrified but is "ashamed at these childish
fears" (198). At another point, Herzog sobs in Terray's arms
about how he will never climb again, "while Terray soothed [him]
with infinite gentleness" (200), placing his head against
Herzog's. Later, Herzog would refer to experiences like these as
mystical and religious. He understands his suffering to be like the
redemptive suffering of Jesus Christ (Roberts 125-26). Herzog also
interprets his suffering as childlike (he cries and is comforted), a
metaphorical descent into hell that the narrative will later redeem when
Herzog shows that his injuries make him more manly, not less. His
behaviour is unmanly, but only temporarily. Herzog's unmanliness is
cast as part of his heroic journey into "hell" and not as
sissiness, childishness, or womanly behaviour.
Herzog's insistence on the greater meaning of the events,
especially his idea that weakness is the spiritual centre of
masculinity, have made the Annapurna expedition into the mythic journey
that captivated readers first in France and then all over the world. The
book became required reading for French youth, particularly boys, who
loved the exploits of the French mountaineers. Maurice Herzog emerged as
the paradigmatic hero for France, someone who was universally respected
not just as a leader but more particularly as a French leader because
(like France) he overcame his own suffering. Herzog's vision has
proven to be very popular. Fifty years after it first appeared,
Annapurna has been published in forty languages and has sold more than
eleven million copies (Roberts 22). The book has had a tremendous impact
on young people who want to be mountaineers and who, in many cases, go
on to become climbers themselves. Frequently, these climbers also are
major authors, arguably because Annapurna inspired them to write as well
as climb. David Roberts, the author of The Mountain of My Fear (1968),
credits his reading of Annapurna as a teenager with the beginning of his
burning desire to become a mountaineer himself. Joe Simpson, another
well-known mountaineering author, writes in an introduction to a recent
edition of Annapurna that reading it when he was fourteen "led me
into what has become a life-long affair with the world's great
mountains" (xiii). Reinhold Messner credits Annapurna with
inspiring him to climb (24).
But the publication in 1996 of Louis Lachenal's unedited
diaries (and the revelation that Herzog himself had tried to suppress
them) in addition to the publication of Gaston Rebuffat's
criticisms of Herzog in a biography of him called Gaston Rebuffat: une
Vie Pour La Montagne (1999) made it clear that Herzog's idealist vision of the expedition and of himself was open to challenge. Paris
Match republished the famous summit photograph of Herzog with a French
flag and pointed out that Herzog does not even appear to be standing on
the summit, raising the question of whether Herzog and Lachenal had ever
reached the top at all (Messner 58-59). It was discovered that during
the ceremony in which the climbers were forced to swear an oath of
loyalty to Herzog as the expedition leader (the oath that Herzog claimed
they willingly took) the climbers also had to sign a contract forbidding
them from publishing anything about the expedition for five years
afterward. Consequently, Herzog's version of events became suspect
and his leadership was called into question. The suspicion that now
surrounds Annapurna as an account highlights the discursive nature of
heroism in the most famous mountaineering book of all time. As other
questions begin to be raised about the myth of Annapurna, the ideals of
naturalized, Romantic masculinity and homosociality in the mountains can
be looked at more critically.
Alpine Style and Countercultural Climbing
First published in 1971, Chris Bonnington's Annapurna: South
Face deals with another pivotal moment in the history of high-altitude
mountaineering: Bonnington's British expedition of 1970 was the
first to climb a big ice face in the Himalayas with the help of modern
climbing techniques and equipment. A lot had changed in the world of
high-altitude climbing since 1950. All of the major peaks in the
Himalayas had been climbed, including Everest, Nanga Parbat, and
[K.sub.2]. Approach routes in the Himalayas were now accurately mapped.
Mountaineers began to look for new challenges at high altitudes, which
meant that they tried to climb mountains via more difficult routes. Most
important of all, lighter equipment and other technical advances meant
that siege-style mountaineering, with its emphasis on lengthy times at
high altitude and its reliance on large numbers of Sherpas and porters,
was becoming less popular in favour of a lighter, faster approach to
climbing called alpine style. Once again, Annapurna would be the focus
of a turning point in the history of mountaineering as Bonnington's
team tried to adapt alpine-style techniques for climbing big walls that
they had learned in the Alps to a high-altitude environment.
The move from siege-style to alpine-style climbing in the Himalayas
has been called one of the most significant changes to mountaineering
since the end of the Heroic Era of first ascents and exploration (Willis
xii xiii). But the change in climbing style also signaled significant
ideological changes in the world of high altitude mountaineering which
were related to the development of youth cultures in different locations
around the world. During the late 1960s and early 1970s, youth were at
the heart of new political movements in Europe, Britain, China, and the
United States, including the American civil rights movement, anti-war
movements, student movements for better education on university campuses
in North America, and the formation of the Red Guard in China during the
Cultural Revolution. Teenagers and young adults in Europe and North
America began to experiment with drugs, questioning the values of their
elders and openly looking for new ways of living and new avenues for
religious expression. Nepal became the focus of this particular aspect
of the countercultural movement because it represented an escape from
Western society, where hippies and other countercultural youth could
learn about Eastern religions and experiment with drugs. Kathmandu
became a preferred destination for these youth. Because Nepal is also
the focus of so much climbing activity, climbing itself began to be seen
as another way to reject the materialism of the West. Mountain climbing
communities began to adopt countercultural values, while at the same
time countercultural approaches to climbing became more popular as
climbing itself became less elite and more people of working-class and
middle-class backgrounds began to climb in the Himalayas.
Countercultural ideology meant that leadership styles became more
egalitarian and collective decision-making was used far more. The
relative simplicity of the alpine climbing style, where there was little
Sherpa support and climbing teams climbed as quickly as possible, was
also attractive to countercultural climbers because it seemed to be less
materialistic and hierarchical than siege climbing had been. (11)
During this time, the Romanticism of the Heroic era gave way to the
Romanticism of the countercultural movement. The Romantic ideology of
climbing and its relationship to heroism did not end but shifted away
from military metaphors and the need for self-sacrifice to mystical
metaphors for climbing and a sense that climbers were in rebellion
against what they saw as the dangers of civilization. These climbers had
a new goal: individual self-realization. For climbers who saw themselves
as participants in the countercultural movement, the adaptation of
alpine style underscored the need many began to have for as pure an
experience of nature that could be had in the mountains. The moral
purity of Herzog's vision gave way to another, more rebellious
sense of moral purity which gave climbers a sense that they were outside
meaningless social restrictions. However, most gendered assumptions
about climbing did not change very much, and the freeing up of some
social customs in climbing did not necessarily alter ideas about
masculine supremacy in the mountains. For instance, although as Ortner
observes more women did begin to climb and the idea of masculine
"sensitivity" did enter climbing discourse, it "is not
that 'machismo' disappeared, but that it became problematised
in this period" (196). And the decision of some climbers to begin
to climb without oxygen was just as much based on ideas about machismo (in the need to do something more difficult and daring to prove oneself as a climber) as it was on the need for simplicity and the faster alpine
style. As before, central ideas to climbing like brotherhood and manhood
were worked out indirectly as the bodily politics of climbing and
leadership style.
Annapurna South Face marks a transition from the Heroic era to
countercultural mountaineering in a number of ways which highlight how
ideas of masculine toughness and the idea of the brotherhood of the rope
are retained within alpine style. The climbing team included Dougal
Haston, who was known for his hard drinking, partying, and nonconformist
behaviour (5), and Don Whillans, a plumber from England's
industrial north who had a reputation for getting into fights (12).
Mountain climbing culture in this account is masculinist in its refusal
of the trappings of ordinary life, including cleanliness: Bonnington
observes that this is "one of the big differences between climbers
and ordinary mortals, for the climbers rarely washed either themselves
or their clothes" (140). To illustrate this point, Bonnington
repeats what Nima Tsering, a young Sherpa, told climbers who slept in
after partying hard the night before: "'You Sahibs are like
buffalo; filthy lying, filthy eating"' (141). This anecdote
ends with Bonnington saying that the television team was "more
civilized" than the climbers themselves (141), a comment that makes
climbers into a breed apart as it shows how they rebel against social
restrictions or disregard them. Activities like this are interpreted in
a gendered way when two women come into the camp, for "the presence
of Babs and Cynth at Base Camp was also welcome, giving it a more
relaxed and civilized atmosphere" (145). Cleanliness and a lack of
debauchery are associated with the presence of women, but dirt and
debauchery are also what separates climbers from non-climbers. It is
implied that women cannot be part of this anti-establishment world. In
the only other description of women climbers in the book, Bonnington
emphasizes the fact that women are not part of the climbing brotherhood
when he describes the arrival of a Japanese women's climbing team:
On 30 March another expedition arrived at our camp. This
was the Japanese women's expedition to Annapurna II, consisting
of nine petite ladies and nine Sherpas to look after
them. We entertained some of them with tea, amidst giggles
and clicking of camera shutters ... that night Alan Hankinson
and Mick Burke made a social call on the girls but were firmly
shepherded away by the leader to talk to the Liaison officer.
(83-84)
In this anecdote, Bonnington describe these climbers in an
Orientalist way as exotic and childlike (they are described as
"petite ladies") and as women who might be sexual objects but
ultimately are not to be taken seriously (they giggle, they are called
"girls;' Sherpas need to look after them). They snap pictures
as if they were tourists, as opposed to the "authentic"
mountaineers who--it is implied--would not engage in this sort of thing.
This is in contrast to how Bonnington describes the Sherpas on his team,
whom he regards as fellow climbers who look after him simply because
they are generous (116-17). Although he admires the physical fitness of
these women (83), Bonnington's rhetoric makes clear that the
climbers--because they are women and because they are Japanese--are not
colleagues and are merely an exotic social distraction. After this
episode, these climbers are never mentioned again, even though they were
making an attempt on Annapurna at the same time.
Except for these brief encounters, the society of Annapurna South
Face is masculine. But anxieties about what masculinity means in times
of conflict surface, particularly when Bonnington discusses his own
leadership. Bonnington is not sure of himself as a leader, in part
because of the changing culture of high-altitude mountaineering with its
new emphasis on collective decision-making and its questioning of
absolute obedience but also because the expedition itself had started as
an alpine-style climb and had been forced to adopt the siege style
because the wall the team had to ascend was so difficult. Bonnington
admits that "there is no doubt that the larger the party, the
further you are separated from the feel of big mountains" (25) but
explains at length that this could not be an option on this particular
climb. For Bonnington, this meant that he had to become a siege-style
leader who thought more about supplies and the placement of camps than
climbing or sharing chores like campsite cleaning, even when other
members grumbled about this (104), or that he had to assert his
authority and not give in to attempts to change his plans (238).
Essentially, Bonnington would be forced to act like Maurice Herzog and
adopt his version of heroic and militaristic masculinity when in fact he
did not wish to. The result is that he worries constantly in the text
about his adequacy as a leader:
I often worried about my ability to hold together a group of
individualistic and very talented climbers. For the past eight
years I had worked as a freelance with very little responsibility
to anyone but myself. The last time I had had any kind of
command responsibility was back in 1960 when I was in the
army, protected by the pips on my shoulder and the might of
military discipline. This is very different from conducting a
mountaineering expedition, where one's authority rests solely
on the loyalty and respect of the team. (28)
Bonnington resolves to mitigate this by thinking of himself as a
co-ordinator and of mountaineering as a game rather than a military
campaign:
[A]s leader, it seemed to me I had to be a diplomat and coordinator
of ideas rather than a disciplinarian ... yet at the
same time I realized that I should have to make decisions at
times that might be unpopular ... we were not fighting a war,
but rather were playing an elaborate, potentially dangerous
game; therefore each individual had the right to decide how far
he should drive himself and the level of risk he was prepared
to accept. (28)
By turning the expedition into a "game," Bonnington
invokes discourses of leisure that could potentially diffuse the
militaristic and heroic masculinity that the siege style of
mountaineering would require him to perform. But, perhaps because
game-playing itself is often a mark of masculine heroism, he is not very
successful in changing the discourse he must adopt. Many of the
conflicts in Annapurna South Face, including the agonizing moment when
Bonnington realizes that he has spent too much time carrying loads and
does not have the strength to get to the summit (195), are expressions
of Bonnington's desire to be a different kind of leader with a
different type of style. Given Bonnington's ambivalence about
siege-style mountaineering, it is perhaps fitting that the two climbers
who most represent the advent of the countercultural climbing aesthetic,
Dougal Haston and Don Whillans, are the climbers who do reach the summit
of Annapurna.
Feminist Mountaineering: Annapurna: A Woman's Place
Sherry B. Ortner has described Annapurna: A Woman's Place as
"one of the most extraordinary mountaineering books ever
written" (228) because of its unusually detailed look at the
problems of gender and race politics. More than twenty years after it
was first published in 1980, Annapurna: A Woman's Place still has
the most sustained discussion of gender politics that can be found in
any expedition account. Moreover, Annapurna: A Woman's Place is
intended to be a feminist document of its time. Arlene Blum, the leader
of the expedition and the author/compiler of Annapurna: A Woman's
Place, produced a chronicle of the climb that was designed as a very
strong political statement about female mountaineers in history and the
sexism that women in mountain expeditions have faced. Features such as
its Introduction, where Blum details how men have tried to exclude women
from climbing and what Mazel has called its more "open and
inclusive feel" as a text, mark Annapurna: A Woman's Place as
an important feminist expedition account (18-19).
But the book is not, as Mazel assumes, just about
"feminism" as a singular alternative to an androcentric tendency in climbing. Blum's text is actually about
"feminisms" that in some respects complement each other and at
other times so divide the team that the expedition threatens to fall
apart. The result is a text that tracks the successes and failures of
different strands of feminism during the climb as it documents the first
successful ascent of Annapurna by an all-female team, the first ascent
of Annapurna by an American-led team, and the deaths of two climbers who
tried to make a second summit attempt. This is all the more interesting
because the women who were part of the American Women's Himalayan
Expedition to Annapurna in 1978 were not activists in the women's
movement of the 1970s. None of them were feminist authors or
intellectuals in the strict sense of the word. Yet they were
participants in the women's movement in the sense that they
attempted to break down barriers which existed for women in the climbing
world, and they tried to do this by changing how climbing itself was
conducted and written about. Annapurna: A Woman's Place is a unique
document for this reason because it shows how non-activist women from a
variety of cultural backgrounds tried to integrate feminist approaches
and principles into a pursuit that is known for its machismo culture.
Annapurna: A Woman's Place also remains an important document
about the history of sexism in mountaineering because sexism is still
very much part of mountaineering discourse. In her 1973 book Women on
the Rope, Cicely Williams claimed that sexism was not part of
mountaineering; Blum dismissed this book as "'ladylike
history"' (quoted in Mazel 20). Today, female climbers are now
very much part of the international climbing scene, but major outdoor
sports magazines such as Outside continue to portray female climbers as
scantily-clad sexual objects. (12) In their biography of Alison
Hargreaves, one of the best climbers of her generation until her death
on [K.sub.2] in 1995, David Rose and Ed Douglas argue that she was
vilified in the popular press for neglecting her duties as a wife and
mother. Her death was even blamed on what was described as
self-centredness in the face of her family obligations (270-75). Sherry
Ortner's study of Mount Everest shows that women climbers on
Everest since the 1970s have had to negotiate the expectation by male
Sherpas and male members of their climbing teams that they are not very
serious climbers and that they should want to have sex with men on the
expedition (228-30). Sexism is not confined to the experiences of
climbers from outside Nepal, either: Ortner also says that Sherpa women
still encounter resistance from Sherpa men when they want to join
expeditions or lead a climb themselves, activities which are essential
for anyone, whether he/she is a Sherpa or not, who wants to work in the
mountaineering industry or to become a more experienced professional
climber (236).
However prevalent sexism still is in mountaineering, a reading of
Annapurna: A Woman's Place highlights that overt sexism does not
quite explain how gender differences and rather anachronistic attitudes
about women continue to be perpetuated in mountaineering writing and in
mountaineering itself. Even today, very few female mountaineers ever say
publicly that they are feminists. Some of them insist that their gender
does not and should not affect how they are seen. (13) In many climbing
accounts, mountaineering could be described as a
"postfeminist" activity, where gender politics does not appear
to surface except in oblique references to the need to empower women so
that they can achieve what men can achieve. Despite the fact that there
continues to be much evidence of sexism in mountaineering circles all
over the world, many leading female high-altitude and big-wall climbers
tend to talk about sexism as if it were a thing of the past. According
to Dianne Chisholm in her study, "Climbing Like a Girl," this
is how it is possible to understand the activity of rock climbing as
informed by gender at all times even if gender difference is not seen as
important by the climber herself, because (in a phenomenological sense)
gender forms both the background and the situation of each climbing
encounter: "[I] n a society of masculine domination, every
situation a woman negotiates is framed by gender so that she is seen as
'other' even if she, herself, does not" (12). Annapurna:
A Woman's Place remains valuable as a portrayal of how complex the
negotiation of sexism and gender difference can be, and what some of the
problems that feminists still face looked like three decades ago. The
struggles of these women--most of whom are American or who lived in the
United States--in their attempt to apply feminist ideas of the 1970s to
mountaineering clearly demonstrates the strengths and the limits of
American feminisms in that period in the heady times before the final
defeat of the Equal Rights Amendment in 1982, when feminists all over
North America thought that they could challenge any injustice they
experienced in their daily lives, anywhere in the world (Mathews and de
Hart viii).
In her Introduction, Arlene Blum presents the project of the
Annapurna climb as explicitly feminist. She details the sexism which
prevented her from joining an expedition in Afghanistan (1) and
recollects Sir Edmund Hillary's view that women should not climb
but stay at home instead while their husbands go out climbing (3). She
writes about common expectations in mountaineering that women should
sleep with all men on a climbing team, and she addresses arguments that
women are biologically unfit for climbing (2-3). She moves on from this
discussion to a short history of women in mountaineering to prove that
women can climb and discusses recent achievements in the Himalayas,
including the first ascent of an 8000-metre peak by women unaccompanied by men in 1975 (7) and the first ascent of Everest by women climbers,
the Japanese climber Junko Tabei and the Tibetan climber Phantog. She
makes sure to include Reinhold Messner's sexist and racist
assessment of Tabei--that, more important than her strength as a
climber, she has "Oriental" grace and, above all, is a good
wife and mother (7). This record of discrimination contextualizes the
decision in 1975 by Blum, the Polish climber Wanda Rutkiewicz (who later
had to withdraw from the expedition), and the British climber Alison
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz to organize an all-women's expedition to the
Himalayas, the expedition that eventually became the 1979 American
Women's Himalayan Expedition to Annapurna.
Blum's intention in the opening chapters of Annapurna: A
Woman's Place is to make mountaineering itself a political act and
to point out how the often-invisible politics of that act had worked to
marginalize the achievements of women climbers or downgrade their
contributions historically and at the present time. But here is where
Annapurna: A Woman's Place becomes a very complex narrative about
feminism and mountaineering. Although the undertaking of an
all-women's expedition was radical for 1978, Blum's own
politics is centrist because she finds an answer to the problem of
sexism in mountaineering in the ideology of American liberal feminism.
According to Zillah Eisenstein, the values of liberal feminism from that
period included independence, equality of opportunity for men and women
in the public sphere, and the preservation of individualism (4-5).
Therefore, following the lead of Betty Friedan, Kate Millett, and
Germaine Greer, liberal feminists believed in the need to work for
change within political systems, preserved the public/private split in
their thinking about women's roles, and did not (at least at first)
have an analysis of patriarchy that would theorize fundamental
differences between women and men as part of fundamental inequalities
between both genders (Whelehan 28-29). The belief many liberal feminists
had in the right of all women to equality with men also meant, as the
expedition T-shirts that the team sold to raise money for the climb
rather puckishly say, "A Woman's Place is On Top," and
not just in the home.
Arlene Blum accepted many of the tenets of liberal feminism and
repeated them in Annapurna: A Woman's Place. She ends her Preface
with the belief that equal access and individual achievement are
paramount in mountaineering because in her view "individual
differences are more important than sexual ones [in climbing]. Women do
have the strength and endurance to climb the highest mountains, just as
men do, and both men and women should have the chance" (8). She
ends the 1983 edition of the book with an even stronger endorsement of
gender equality: "[N]ow the time has come for people to be accepted
on expeditions not as men or women but as climbers. Women and men have
complimentary abilities, and they can and should climb their Annapurnas
as equals, with mutual respect" (246). As we shall see shortly,
Blum's belief in the equality of all people on the team becomes an
important aspect of her struggle to become a good expedition leader.
The liberal feminist discourse in Annapurna: A Woman's Place
also contains--in miniature--a major problem that faced the North
American women's movement. Many liberal feminists in the second
wave of the North American women's movement who believed in the
worth of the individual and the need for equality did not understand
that they themselves contributed to inequalities based on race, class,
and sexuality differences. Sisterhood, in other words, was not
transcultural and did not traverse class boundaries either. (14) Like
many liberal feminists at that time, Blum's understanding of
sexuality also did not include an understanding of lesbianism. At the
same time, many radical feminists in the women's movement were not
just "lesbian feminists" but thought of themselves as
lesbians. Betty Friedan's well-known denunciation of lesbians as
"the lavender menace" at a NOW convention was merely the most
public response of many straight liberal feminists who thought of any
kind of difference within the women's movement as a possible threat
to the success of the whole movement and who tried to emphasize the
sisterhood of all women. (15) Although Blum is no Friedan and probably
was not overtly seeking to exclude lesbian experiences, as a straight
liberal feminist at the time she may not have recognized what their
absence might have meant. When Blum says that when the climbers read an
article about their expedition called "What Will Their Husbands
Think" and talked about it, she also mentions that in fact most of
the expedition had left husbands or lovers in order to do the climb
(79). This assumption probably does not include lesbian experience: the
sexuality of climber Piro Kranmar, who is a lesbian and who had a
permanent partner, 16 is not discussed, although the boyfriends or
husbands of all the other climbers are mentioned. While Kranmar may have
chosen to remain closeted or at least private about her sexuality given
the climate of the time, Blum's reaction to Kranmar's need for
privacy indicates that she saw this as a personality trait (and an
annoying one at that) and not as anything more. For instance, when Blum
says that Kranmar did not want to share her personal diary with the rest
of the group and guarded her privacy, she describes this as a problem
for expedition records (13-14). On other occasions, she sees
Kranmar's withdrawal as a refusal of her leadership and (unlike her
assessment of other team members) does not look for other reasons why
this might be the case. This reaction appears to be similar to the
initial incomprehension of many liberal feminists at the Now conferences
in the early 1970s when lesbians demanded to be heard and represented in
their own right.
In a similar way, in Annapurna: A Woman's Place, the
expedition also faces the problem of cultural difference and feminist
transnationalism, just as the larger feminist movement has had to do.
For example, when base camp manager Christy Tews beats a male Japanese
climber in sumo wrestling, she is angered by accusations from the
Japanese team that she is really a woman in a man's body. Blum
sympathizes with Tews and says that "women who are stronger or
smarter or taller or better at things than men often must pay a
price" (130). But Blum only thinks about the treatment of Tews in
terms of gender inequality. The fact that Tews--a white Western
woman--beat a man at a sport that is central to Japanese masculine
culture has political overtones beyond those of gender which could
explain the reaction of the Japanese climbers. But Blum's belief in
the universality of gender inequality means that she cannot think about
the role that cultural differences played in the conflict.
The liberal feminist view of transnati\onalist feminist analysis
also explains why one goal of the expedition members--to train Sherpanis
(female Sherpas) to climb so that they could be empowered--was never
realized. The expedition members had made the liberal feminist
assumption that as all gender relations are comparable, so all kinds of
oppression are universal. But the climbers know relatively little about
Sherpa culture and its view of gender relations (Ortner x). As Blum
points out, she learns the hard way that her feminist beliefs are too
utopian when she is forced to fire Sherpanis who want more pay for
laundry work and who say that they don't want to climb:
We had wanted to help the Sherpanis, teach them to climb,
give them a new opportunity. Instead, here they were, leaving
feeling cheated and betrayed, and we felt the same. Our frames
of reference were too different. We had probably been naive
to try bringing such changes into their lives. (89)
The results of the difficulty that Blum and the rest of the team
had with understanding Sherpa issues in any terms other than gendered
ones meant that Sherpa discontent was high for much of the expedition.
Indeed, as Annapurna: A Woman's Place details, the working
relationship between Sherpas and climbers became so tense that the
Sherpas mounted a strike for better treatment during the expedition
(162-72). Some climbers complained that Sherpas were making obscene
comments about them (110), while others complained when Sherpas wanted
to break trail and deny them the chance to lead (118). Although some of
the problems with Sherpas on the expedition probably were about gender
differences, others (such as the issue of Sherpa pay) were about working
conditions and the class differences between the men who climbed for
hire and the women who paid them.
Although Blum is more direct than other authors about the nature of
gender politics in mountaineering, Annapurna: A Woman's Place is
also an expedition narrative that is firmly rooted in the tradition
insinuated by Herzog's account. The close connection with
Herzog's narrative in particular is deliberate, and it shows how
much Blum owes him: Annapurna: A Woman's Place even opens with a
Foreword by Herzog himself in which Herzog strongly endorses the
presence of women in mountaineering and states emphatically that women
have the right to be leaders in all areas of life (ix). At the end of
the Preface, Blum rewrites a passage of Herzog's by making it
gender inclusive, a move that installs her narrative as part of his
tradition, even as she makes sure to change its original gender
politics: "Maurice Herzog expresses this [the challenge of the
climb] well in his account of the first ascent of Annapurna: 'in
attempting to do the hardest tasks, all our resources are called upon,
and the power and greatness of mankind [my emphasis] are
defined'" (8 emphasis Blum's). Herzog's words
reappear and are altered at another key point of Blum's narrative,
for the same reasons. The last words of Annapurna: A Woman's Place
deliberately echo Herzog's famous ending but give the ending a
feminist twist: "As Maurice Herzog declares at the end of his book:
'There are other Annapurnas in the lives of men. And in the lives
of women as well" (244). And in the Preface to the twentieth
anniversary edition of Annapurna: A Woman's Place Blum rewrites
Herzog's message again and gives it an even more inclusive
political meaning: "There are still many Annapurnas' to be
climbed in the world--such as protecting our natural environment;
decreasing the gap between rich and poor; providing basic necessities
for everyone on this planet; and raising our children to live with love
and good values" (x).
The rhetoric of Blum's account resembles the rhetoric of
Herzog and Bonnington, especially when she talks about leadership and
style. Although in places she is more direct than Herzog or Bonnington
about gender issues, Blum often does write about gender much as they do:
as a bodily politics related to the problem of leadership and the
problem of climbing siege style. Like Bonnington had done, Blum makes
use of expedition diaries by the other climbers in order to talk about a
similar type of conflict on her team between siege-style mountaineering
techniques and alpine techniques. And like the climbers who appear in
Annapurna: South Face, the climbers in Annapurna: A Woman's Place
experience this conflict as one about gender, but this time the
disagreements on the team about climbing style refer to differences
within feminism itself.
The nature of leadership is a major part of Annapurna: A
Woman's Place. In fact, leadership issues are so important in this
text that in the Preface to the twentieth anniversary edition of the
book, Blum says that she mainly wrote Annapurna: A Woman's Place to
help herself understand the challenges she faced as an expedition leader
(ix). She now leads seminars on leadership, including a workshop called
"Climbing Your Own Everests: Leadership Skills to Meet the
Challenge of Change." This is related to the problem of siege
style. In Annapurna: A Woman's Place, as in Chris Bonnington's
text, the expedition considers climbing alpine style but decides to try
siege tactics because Alpine style might prove to be even more difficult
and dangerous (75). And just as siege style forces Bonnington to become
a different kind of leader, so Arlene Blum has to emulate the masculine
heroic model of leadership that siege style requires. This is against
her nature, in part because the militaristic style in this kind of
leadership is not what she, as a woman, had learned:
Although my upbringing and experience had taught me to
be moderate and soothing, I was learning the hard way that
these traits are not always compatible with effective leadership.
Although I didn't yet sound like an authentic army general, I
was moving in that direction. The trick was to move just far
enough ... the expedition needed a strong leader but not a
dictator. (36)
Moreover, the ideology of siege-style climbing, with its stress on
unquestioning obedience to the leader, is at odds with the feminist
principles of the climbers, who often want to make group decisions. For
example, when Blum tells the group that the Sherpas Ang and Lakpa will
be among the climb's leaders who will establish Camp I, the group
rejects this decision and has a discussion about the decision's
problems. At one point, the climber Annie Whitehouse asks Blum to make
an executive decision, and Blum observes, "[H]ere was the essential
paradox again. I was supposed to be the leader and decide what was going
to happen, yet everyone wanted decisions to be made democratically"
(116). Here, Blum experiences direct conflict between alpine climbing
style, where decisions are made collectively in accordance with
countercultural values, and siege style, where decisions are made by the
leader. In the end, she decides that in this case, consensus
decision-making would have been the better course, and she affirms that
"it had been worth it to take the time to face each other and
expose our vulnerabilities" (119).
But conflict continues throughout the expedition when competing
versions of feminist politics become enmeshed with debates about style.
The focus of this conflict in the text is Alison Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz.
Blum introduces her as "a purist" who believed that the climb
should be women-only, without Sherpas (27). This is not a colonial
attitude to the Sherpas as mere servants, although Chadwick-Onyskiewicz
does get angry at Sherpa requests for more remuneration and makes little
effort to understand why they might be upset (log).
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz's opinions are in keeping with the ideology
of alpine style, with its assumption that climbs should be
"pure" and as simple as possible so that all team members can
achieve individual goals. Her belief that there should be no Sherpas on
the climb at all is also in keeping with alpine style's emphasis on
small teams and minimal or no Sherpa/porter support. But
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz's belief that the expedition should be
women-only is a feminist interpretation of alpine style that is not
liberal but radical. Unlike Blum's more conciliatory approach
toward men on the expedition and in climbing more generally,
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz constantly repeats in Annapurna: A Woman's
Place a separatist view of climbing that is more in keeping with the
separatism of radical feminism during the 1970s, where the presence of
any men in the women's movement was thought to prevent women from
developing their own ways of thinking and being (Whelehan 39). At first,
Blum shares this view about who should be on the summit team when she
opposes a Sherpa request to summit first and interprets the request as
"paternalistic" (169). Later, however, she compromises, and
the summit team did include two women and two Sherpas.
But Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz's desire to summit in the alpine
style also involved her goal of not only climbing Annapurna but of
climbing the middle summit of the massif, which had never before been
attempted. In this way, Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz is much more like climbers
Haston and Whillans in that she has little patience with siege style or
with its hierarchical way of decision-making. She preferred the riskier
approach and its Romantic associations with achievement, creativity,
risk, and simplicity: "'The route straight up from camp is the
most aesthetic line,' Alison said. 'I'd rather go that
way. If two of us [Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz and Vera Watson] could climb
that hard rock together, it would be more an achievement than my
Gasherbrum climb"' (206). After a debate about the safety of
this approach, Blum reluctantly lets Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz and Watson do
the climb to Camp V to start the summit attempt, without oxygen. At this
point, siege style gives way to alpine style in the narrative because
Blum has no authority over the summit team: "I [Blum] had to admire
Alison's single-minded dedication-not just to climbing the mountain
but to doing it in a certain style" (206). Tragically,
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz and Watson fall even before they reach the high
camp, and they are killed instantly (230). Although it is not the style
of climbing that kills them (if there had been Sherpas with them, they
would not have been able to stop the fall because they would have
climbed on a separate rope), Blum questions her leadership ability
because she let them go and has to be reassured by other members of the
team (234-35). In the end, Blum finds some healing with the rest of the
group when they chip Watson's and Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz's
names onto a memorial stone at the foot of Annapurna.
Backlash: Reinhold Messner's History of Annapurna Climbs
Reinhold Messner is arguably the most iconoclastic living
high-altitude mountaineer who climbs in the alpine style. His
achievements have helped to push mountaineering in the Himalayas to new
levels: he was the first to climb an 8000-metre peak in the alpine style
in a single push; he was the first to climb Everest without supplemental
oxygen; and he was the first person to climb all fourteen 8000-metre
mountains. Messner's climbing philosophy has been to increase
climbing risks while simplifying the logistics of the climb itself and
to oppose the commercialization of high-altitude mountaineering entailed
in the growth of guided climbs.
Messner measures the quality of climbing by its challenge and
originality. In Annapurna: 50 Years of Expeditions to the Death Zone,
Messner affirms his belief that Annapurna is one of the most difficult
mountains to climb and adds that it should remain this way or climbing
itself will become impure. As he says, "the eight-thousanders first
became a vanishing point for national pride, then an exotic destination
for millions, and today they are a 'heroes playground,'
because their 'challenge' has not been completely
expended" (68-69). Messner, therefore, wishes to restore a heroic
element to mountaineering that he believes has been lost as climbing
these mountains becomes more popular and less risky. And, for him,
national motives or other social reasons to climb are simply not heroic
enough. To this end, he defends Maurice Herzog against the accusations
that have been made against him about his leadership in the name of
heroism itself and ignores the nationalist overtones of Herzog's
own account. According to Messner, "the ascent of Annapurna is and
remains Herzog's own personal feat of heroism" (24), a
statement that reinstates heroic discourse at the heart of
mountaineering. He ends his retelling of the expedition story with this
poem to Herzog: "Maurice Herzog./What a career!/ What a
personality!" (64 italics in original). The poem serves to
literally underscore Herzog's heroic status, despite the criticism
of his leadership that has been in evidence since 1996.
Messner goes on to describe the other expeditions on Annapurna that
he sees as ground-breaking within his criteria of pure mountaineering
and heroism in climbing new routes. These include the climb of
Bonnington's team, a traverse of the whole Annapurna ridge, and his
own first ascent of the northwest ridge. Messner's decision to
discuss only the climbs of Annapurna that were notable for their first
ascents means that he leaves out any other criteria for achievement.
National or even cultural achievements do not matter: there is no
mention of the first Japanese team to summit or who the first Sherpas
were. There is no discussion of gender either, except in the abstract
language of masculine toughness when he and his climbing partners come
across one of the dozens of corpses on Annapurna and photograph it.
Although Messner says of the body, "[I]t was as if death belonged
here in this bizarre glacial world ... we wasted no time puzzling over
who he might once have been, or how he had died" (111-12), for
reasons why Messner does not explain, the photograph is repeated later
in the book. Why does the photograph appear twice if "death"
does not bear thinking about? The corpse serves as the reminder to be
stoic and brave in the face of death, but because the gaze of the living
climber cannot ever be returned by the body itself, the image of the
corpse or its sign, the grave marker, appears repeatedly in
Messner's Annapurna as the sign of difference that must be
surmounted by manly stoicism.
This tendency to surmount difference by means of a particularly
type of mountain masculinity and its endorsement of toughness is
particularly important for Messner's treatment of the American
Women's Expedition to Annapurna. Although he could leave out a
discussion of the expedition as he leaves out others, he does not.
Rather, Messner includes it much as he includes the unknown corpse which
he says does not matter but which he cannot ignore. In Annapurna, he
includes a photograph of the memorial to Vera Watson and Alison
Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz with the caption "Memorial to the dead at
Annapurna Base Camp" (167). He never identifies the women by name.
And in his list of expeditions to Annapurna, Messner says that Ian
Clough from Bonnington's climb "is tragically killed on the
descent" but of Chadwick-Onyszkiewicz and Watson he says only that
on that climb "one English woman and one American woman fall to
their deaths" (154). Messner also includes a photograph of Wanda
Rutkiewicz, the woman who originally had the idea to do an
all-women's climb to Annapurna. Messner's caption identifies
her as "the most successful female high-altitude mountaineer to
date" before he says that the photograph was taken just before her
death on the mountain Kanchenjunga after her ascent of Annapurna in 1991
(171). Like the other narratives I have examined, Messner's
treatment of women in Annapurna: so Years shows that gender can only be
represented indirectly as part of bodily politics, but in this case
bodily politics only revolves around the twin signs of death and
heroism. Messner's book, therefore, is more than a call to value
climbs for their difficulty and risk. It also contains a backlash
discourse against the achievements of women climbers in its own use of
bodily politics because of its insistence on a narrow type of heroism as
its criteria for climbing success. The only other option in this
representational system is to be represented as a corpse that must
resurface in order to recall the importance of masculine values to
mountaineering.
Conclusion
I'd like to conclude with a discussion of an image: the famous
painting by Kaspar David Friedrich called Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog of 1818. As one of the most Romantic interpretations of mountain
climbing ever made, Wanderer highlights what I have been saying about
the connections between gender, heroism, and the purity of the climbing
experience in books about high-altitude expeditions. We cannot see the
face of climber in Wanderer because he faces away from us, feet firmly
planted on a rocky spire, walking stick at his side. We see the view he
sees: a mystical landscape of mountain peaks and swirling clouds. It is
clear that we are meant to share in his view but not in his experience,
which is private. We can see from his clothes that he is a gentleman and
that he is young and fit. Otherwise, he is anonymous. This climber is
above civilization and is part of a higher realm: he is the embodiment
of the Romantic ideal for mountaineering as a quasi-religious
experience. Here, the heroic climber is pictured literally at the peak
of success, without anyone to help him. He is rewarded with a mystical
experience almost as if he were divine himself. Because his face is
turned away from us, we are invited to imagine that we could take his
place. This ideal view of mountaineering has endured for almost two
centuries: it is the ideal which Herzog did so much to perpetuate in
Annapurna.
The belief that mountaineering itself is literally
"above" political concerns like race, class, or gender and
that in theory "anyone" could have this mountaintop experience
has endured too, even though (like the climber in the painting) the
traces of gender, race, and class mark the bodies of climbers and shape
the experience of climbing just as they shape other forms of experience.
And, yet, we are invited to imagine that here at least, gender (among
other things) does not matter. Like the mountaineering expedition
narratives which invite us to share vicariously what the intense
experience of climbing a major mountain is like, Wanderer holds out the
promise that it is possible to be "above" things like gender
and not to mention it, even though the very materiality of its hero
forecloses that possibility. What cannot be mentioned occupies the very
centre of the painting.
For more than fifty years, the mountain Annapurna has been the site
where a complex history of gender in mountaineering literature gets
written much as the heroic climber of Wanderer can be viewed, as a
"bodily politics" that does allow gender to have a central
place in the creation of mountain masculinities and sometimes mountain
feminisms, even within the most Romantic documents of mountaineering.
Discussions about siege-style climbing or the purity of alpine style are
also discussions about the politics of using these styles and about what
kind of social organization they also imply. In a postfeminist climate
where so many discussions about the power of women seem to have altered
the politics of feminism beyond recognition, the narratives of Annapurna
climbs have something valuable to tell us about how politics does enter
at least one form of everyday life, even when political talk seems to be
silenced. If we look closely at the rhetoric of mountaineering
expedition memoirs, it is possible to see how the Romantic ideals in
Herzog's often-repeated statement that "there are other
Annapurnas in the lives of men" can be given a politics and a
history--and even, when Arlene Blum rewrites them, to become a call for
political change.
Acknowledgements
Thanks to Dianne Chisholm, Mark Simpson, and Jo-Ann Wallace for
their insightful editorial comments. Thanks to Pearl Ann Reichwein and
Ali Jones for sharing research materials with me.
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Julie Rak
University of Alberta
(1) For the purposes of this study, high-altitude mountaineering
refers to the practice of climbing mountains when oxygen apparatus is
used or when the decision not to use oxygen is seen as the assumption of
an additional risk. This is usually at altitudes above 7000 metres or
22,960 feet above sea level. See the UIAA Mountain Medicine
Centre's 2002 study of the effects of supplementary oxygen at
extreme altitude: www.thebmc.co.uk/world/mm/mm9.htm.
(2) See Arlene Blum's Preface to Rachel Da Silva's
Leading Out: Women Climbers Reaching for the Top (xi-xiv) for a
discussion of the role of women in mountaineering history. Arlene Blum
also includes a more detailed history of women mountaineers at the
beginning of Annapurna: A Woman's Place. I will discuss this later
in the paper.
(3) See the chapter "On the Sublime" in Edmund
Burke's A Philosophic Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the
Sublime and the Beautiful (1857) for a full description of the
relationship between danger and exhilaration in the aesthetics of the
sublime. Although Burke was not a Romantic himself, his ideas about the
aesthetics of the sublime proved to be important to English Romantics
like William Wordsworth and John Ruskin, who traveled to Chamonix and
wrote a book about the Alps that contributed to the rise of interest in
tourism and mountaineering in that region (Bernstein 54-55).
(4) See Peter Hansen (1995) for an account of Victorian
mountaineering as a British middle-class sport and for a discussion of
the beginnings of British imperialism, leisure sports, and
mountaineering.
(5) Peter L. Bayers makes the connection between British and
American imperial adventure and masculinity explicit in Imperial Ascent:
Mountaineering Masculinity, and Empire, and Reuben Ellis discusses early
twentieth-century climbing and what he calls the neo-imperialism of
Britain and Europe in Vertical Margins: Mountaineering and the
Landscapes of Neoimperialism. In the case of Mount Everest, Stephen
Slemon looks at narratives about Mount Everest as part of the discourse
of British colonialism in "Climbing Mount Everest: Postcolonialism
in the Culture of Ascent," while Sherry B. Ortner in Life and Death
on Mount Everest devotes a chapter to men and masculinity. In a
rejection of Ortner's concept of masculinity, Susan Frohlick has
discussed high-altitude mountaineering as an example of hypermasculinity
in "The 'Hypermasculine' Landscape of High-altitude
Mountaineering."
(6) Many of these studies focus on John Krakauer's Into Thin
Air, which stages the conflict between countercultural climbing values
and commercialization clearly, although this is not the only way the
issues are discussed. For general studies of commodification, see
Barbara Johnston's "The Commodification of
Mountaineering" and Catharine Palmer's "'Shit
Happens': The Selling of Risk in Extreme Sport:' For a study
of the advent of high-altitude mountain tourism, see Susan
Frohlick's "Negotiating the 'Global' Within the
Global Playscapes of Mount Everest" Sample studies of
Krakauer's work can be found in Gene McQuillan's
"'No Anthems Playing in My Head"' and in Slemon
(24-25).
(7) Most studies of early women climbers and gender politics have
North America as their focus. For examples, see Pearl Anne Reichwein and
Karen Fox, "Margaret Fleming and the Alpine Club of Canada: A
Woman's Place in Mountain Leisure
and Literature, 1932-1952" and Karen Routledge's study
"Being a Girl Without Being a Girl: Gender and Mountaineering on
Mount Waddington, 1926-1936." David Mazel's introduction to
Mountaineering Women: Stories by Early Climbers is another feminist
account, but it is brief. The other feminist studies of women and
high-altitude mountaineering are found in selected chapters of Sherry B.
Ortner's Life and Death on Mount Everest and Susan Frohlick's
2004 article "'Who is Lhakpa Sherpa?' Circulating
Subjectivities within the Global/ Local Terrain of Himalayan
Mountaineering" Dianne Chisholm's study of Lynn Hill's
memoir and feminist phenomenology is the first sustained examination of
rock climbing which employs feminist theorizing. See "Climbing Like
a Girl: An Exemplary Adventure in Feminist Phenomenology," Hypatia
23.1 (Winter 2008),11-40.
(8) For two early views of la cordee feminine, see a 1933 piece by
Nea Morin, "La Cordee Feminine" in A Woman's Reach:
Mountaineering Memoirs (1968) and the account of "manless
climbs" of the 1920s and 1930s in Reichwein and Fox. For a more
contemporary discussion of la cordee feminine, see Cicely
Williams's Women on the Rope: The Feminine Share of Mountain
Adventure (1973).
(9) Thanks to Andrew Gow for inventing the term "mountain
masculinity:"
(10) For a detailed look at the development of a mountaineering
counterculture, see Ortner's chapter "Counterculture,"
185-216.
(11) The April 2005 issue of Outside Magazine has "Women of
Rock" as a cover story. The photo features a major climber, Sara
Carlson, posing provocatively in the nude on a rock. One of the stories
in that issue is called "Babes on Belay" and features similar
photos of other female climbers.
(12) Although there are some exceptions, most notably Rachel Da
Silva's anthology Leading Out, popular magazines about climbing
tell a different story about feminism and mountaineering. More women are
climbing than ever before and there are more aspects of climbing that
are geared to women, but most feminist thinking in women's climbing
presently is limited to the idea that climbing is generally empowering
for women. Many leading female climbers resist this and go on record
saying that they would prefer to be thought of as "climbers"
and not "female climbers" because they do not support the
empowerment discourse. For recent examples, see Mick Ryan's article
"Climb Like a Girl" in the online magazine UKC: UK
Climbing.com (2005) and Lizzy Scully's article "In the
Footsteps of Fanny: Climbing in the Karakoram" for Climbing
Magazine (2003).
(13) For a sustained discussion of the problem of sisterhood in
light of other conditions of inequality, see Audre Lorde's essay
"Age, Race, Class, and Sex: Women Redefining Difference" in
Sister Outsider 114-23.
(14) For a complete account of Betty Friedan's confrontation
with radical feminist lesbians, see Susan Browrimiller's In Our
lime (1999).
(15) Although Kranmar's sexuality is not discussed in the
earlier editions of the text, her partner is mentioned in the Afterword
to the twentieth-anniversary edition of Annapurna: A Woman's Place
(234).
(16) See Arlene Blum's website for a full account of her
workshops at www. arleneblum.com.
JULIE RAK is an Associate Professor in the Department of English and Film Studies at the University of Alberta. She is the author of
Negotiated Memory: Doukhobor Autobiographical Discourse (University of
British Columbia Press 2004) and the editor of Auto/biography in Canada
(Wilfrid Laurier UP 2005), with Andrew Gow the co-editor of Mountain
Masculinity: the Life and Writings of Nello "Tex" Vernon-Wood
(Athabasca up 2008) and with Jeremy Popkin the co-editor of a
forthcoming collection of essays by Philippe Lejeune, On Diary
(University of Hawaii Press 2009). She is writing a book on memoir and
biography for mass markets and holds a SSHRC grant to investigate gender
issues in mountaineering writing and films.