New Horizons for the Alps – Ethnographies, Reshaping Challenges, and Emerging More-Than-Alpine Relations
Editors
Almut Schneider, Elisabeth Tauber
Bibliographic information
2024, 304 p.
- ISBN: 978-88-6046-198-8
- DOI : 10.13124/9788860461988
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Description
With a fresh view on contemporary Alpine anthropology, this volume provides a comprehensive examination of ethnographic research in the Alpine region and addresses socio-cultural transformations driven by climate change, tourism and a variety of economic and environmental pressures. By bringing together diverse perspectives from a range of contributors who reflect on their fieldwork experiences and the evolving dynamics of Alpine communities, it aims to fill a significant gap in the anthropology of the Alps.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.With a fresh view on contemporary Alpine anthropology, this volume provides a comprehensive examination of ethnographic research in the Alpine region and addresses socio-cultural transformations driven by climate change, tourism and a variety of economic and environmental pressures. By bringing together diverse perspectives from a range of contributors who reflect on their fieldwork experiences and the evolving dynamics of Alpine communities, it aims to fill a significant gap in the anthropology of the Alps.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.With a fresh view on contemporary Alpine anthropology, this volume provides a comprehensive examination of ethnographic research in the Alpine region and addresses socio-cultural transformations driven by climate change, tourism and a variety of economic and environmental pressures. By bringing together diverse perspectives from a range of contributors who reflect on their fieldwork experiences and the evolving dynamics of Alpine communities, it aims to fill a significant gap in the anthropology of the Alps.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.With a fresh view on contemporary Alpine anthropology, this volume provides a comprehensive examination of ethnographic research in the Alpine region and addresses socio-cultural transformations driven by climate change, tourism and a variety of economic and environmental pressures. By bringing together diverse perspectives from a range of contributors who reflect on their fieldwork experiences and the evolving dynamics of Alpine communities, it aims to fill a significant gap in the anthropology of the Alps.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.With a fresh view on contemporary Alpine anthropology, this volume provides a comprehensive examination of ethnographic research in the Alpine region and addresses socio-cultural transformations driven by climate change, tourism and a variety of economic and environmental pressures. By bringing together diverse perspectives from a range of contributors who reflect on their fieldwork experiences and the evolving dynamics of Alpine communities, it aims to fill a significant gap in the anthropology of the Alps.
Drawing on a rich collection of ethnographic studies, this book reveals the intersection of local practices with global forces such as industrial agriculture, tourism and height technology. The three thematic sections examine enduring cultural practices, changing landscapes as well as transforming relationships between people and the land. Viewing the Alps as a microcosm of global change, this volume offers new anthropological insights into the Alpine region and beyond.
New Horizons for the Alps is both a critical reflection on the state of Alpine anthropology and an invitation to future research that recognises the complexity of human-environment interactions.
Contents
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Front matter
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Exploring Ethnography for Moving Mountain Confines: An Introduction
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A Remote Land in the Heart of Europe: Some Dilemmas in the Anthropological Study of Alpine Societies
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Where Do the Alps End? Reflections on Practices of Locality and Future-Making in the Italian Alpine Region
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Doing Research in the French Alps. Spaces, Places and Politics
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Alpine Pasture in the Julian Alps (Slovenia): The Krstenica Alp Revisited
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“The Woodland Must Be Cultivated as a Field” – Conversations About the Changing Natural Environment in Vinigo di Cadore (Belluno, Italy)
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What Does a High-Altitude Farmer Do? Different Perspectives on Mountain Practices
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Thinking with Verticality: Making a High Place in the Alpine Cryosphere in the Anthropocene
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A “Magic Bubble” and a “Place of Strength” – When Images and Connections Shape the Swiss Alps
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Journeys Beyond: Navigating Through Land, Movement and the Dead in the Italian Eastern Alps – Perspectives From Elsewhere
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Epilogue: Alpine Anthropology in the Anthropocene
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Authors
Reviews
In a clear language and with a firm grasp of the relevant literature, 'New Horizons for the Alps' discusses the wide range of challenges which Alpine communities are facing nowadays. The thoroughly-researched chapters present previously overlooked narratives about the complex interplay between the environment, landscapes, and its inhabitants. Drawing upon intensive ethnographic fieldwork conducted over the years, the contributors to the volume let social actors speak for themselves, and provide fine-grained analyses of issues as diverse as practices of locality, political economy, agriculture and animal husbandry, as well as tourism in a hot spot of climate change. 'New Horizons for the Alps' is a thought-provoking and most enlightening volume, and is an important addition to the expanding anthropological literature on changing mountain environments. As such, it is relevant for policy makers, graduate students, and faculty more generally, and deserves a broad readership in Anthropology, Sociology, Geography, Social and Economic History, and in Environmental and European Studies.Jaro Stacul (University of Warsaw), 2025
License
Except where otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

