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Writing from 'the Perilous Ridge': romanticism and the invention of rock climbing

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Writing from 'the Perilous Ridge': romanticism and the invention of rock climbing. / Bainbridge, Simon.
In: Romanticism, Vol. 19, No. 3, 10.2013, p. 246-260.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Bainbridge S. Writing from 'the Perilous Ridge': romanticism and the invention of rock climbing. Romanticism. 2013 Oct;19(3):246-260. doi: 10.3366/rom.2013.0142

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@article{48ce9a0fd06340fbb6cf8f1a85ae847c,
title = "Writing from 'the Perilous Ridge': romanticism and the invention of rock climbing",
abstract = "This essay argues that rock climbing had its genesis in the Romantic period and that there was a powerful synergy between the emergent sport and the era{\textquoteright}s literature. It was during the Romantic period that clambering on crags, cliffs and ridges started to become an activity undertaken for its own sake and began to provide a subject for literature, developments which I explore in the essay{\textquoteright}s first section through an examination of the travel writing of William Bingley and others. In the second section, I argue that the specific embodied experience of rock climbing was integral to the development of a key Romantic trope, visionary power, an issue I consider through readings of two of the period{\textquoteright}s greatest first-hand accounts of rock climbing, Wordsworth{\textquoteright}s poetic evocation of his scrambling on Yewdale Crags in The Prelude and Coleridge{\textquoteright}s epistolary description of his descent of Broad Stand. In the final section of the essay, I investigate how climbing became a feature of some of the era{\textquoteright}s most significant as well as best-selling poems and novels, focusing particularly on Walter Scott{\textquoteright}s work to show how his writing transformed the image of the climber, shaped the imagining of the nascent sport, and laid the foundation for the remarkable expansion of rock climbing in the second half of the nineteenth century.",
keywords = "Rock Climbing, Romantic Period , Mountaineering , Vision, Sport, Walter Scott",
author = "Simon Bainbridge",
note = "Copyright {\textcopyright} 2013. Edinburgh University Press",
year = "2013",
month = oct,
doi = "10.3366/rom.2013.0142",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "246--260",
journal = "Romanticism",
issn = "1354-991X",
publisher = "Edinburgh University Press",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Writing from 'the Perilous Ridge'

T2 - romanticism and the invention of rock climbing

AU - Bainbridge, Simon

N1 - Copyright © 2013. Edinburgh University Press

PY - 2013/10

Y1 - 2013/10

N2 - This essay argues that rock climbing had its genesis in the Romantic period and that there was a powerful synergy between the emergent sport and the era’s literature. It was during the Romantic period that clambering on crags, cliffs and ridges started to become an activity undertaken for its own sake and began to provide a subject for literature, developments which I explore in the essay’s first section through an examination of the travel writing of William Bingley and others. In the second section, I argue that the specific embodied experience of rock climbing was integral to the development of a key Romantic trope, visionary power, an issue I consider through readings of two of the period’s greatest first-hand accounts of rock climbing, Wordsworth’s poetic evocation of his scrambling on Yewdale Crags in The Prelude and Coleridge’s epistolary description of his descent of Broad Stand. In the final section of the essay, I investigate how climbing became a feature of some of the era’s most significant as well as best-selling poems and novels, focusing particularly on Walter Scott’s work to show how his writing transformed the image of the climber, shaped the imagining of the nascent sport, and laid the foundation for the remarkable expansion of rock climbing in the second half of the nineteenth century.

AB - This essay argues that rock climbing had its genesis in the Romantic period and that there was a powerful synergy between the emergent sport and the era’s literature. It was during the Romantic period that clambering on crags, cliffs and ridges started to become an activity undertaken for its own sake and began to provide a subject for literature, developments which I explore in the essay’s first section through an examination of the travel writing of William Bingley and others. In the second section, I argue that the specific embodied experience of rock climbing was integral to the development of a key Romantic trope, visionary power, an issue I consider through readings of two of the period’s greatest first-hand accounts of rock climbing, Wordsworth’s poetic evocation of his scrambling on Yewdale Crags in The Prelude and Coleridge’s epistolary description of his descent of Broad Stand. In the final section of the essay, I investigate how climbing became a feature of some of the era’s most significant as well as best-selling poems and novels, focusing particularly on Walter Scott’s work to show how his writing transformed the image of the climber, shaped the imagining of the nascent sport, and laid the foundation for the remarkable expansion of rock climbing in the second half of the nineteenth century.

KW - Rock Climbing

KW - Romantic Period

KW - Mountaineering

KW - Vision

KW - Sport

KW - Walter Scott

U2 - 10.3366/rom.2013.0142

DO - 10.3366/rom.2013.0142

M3 - Journal article

VL - 19

SP - 246

EP - 260

JO - Romanticism

JF - Romanticism

SN - 1354-991X

IS - 3

ER -