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Ski Style: Sport And Culture In The Rockies Cultureamerica



This excerpt from "Ski Style: Sport and Culture in the Rockies Cultureamerica" by Annie Coleman tells the story of how skiing has come to be a major part of American culture. Coleman traces skiing's origins back to Norse and Alpine influences and how it has evolved over the past century into an industry combining recreation, tourism, consumption, and wilderness. Coleman discusses how the meaning o... more details
Key Features:
  • Skiing has origins in Norse and Alpine influences and has evolved over the past century into an industry combining recreation, tourism, consumption, and wilderness
  • The meaning of skiing has changed over the years, from a recreational activity to a status symbol and an indicator of style
  • Modern consumer culture has merged the mythic West with real western places, creating a new sense of identity for skiers and snowboarders


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Features
Author Annie Gilbert Coleman
Format Hardcover
ISBN 9780700613410
Publisher University Press of Kansas
Manufacturer University Press Of Kansas
Description
This excerpt from "Ski Style: Sport and Culture in the Rockies Cultureamerica" by Annie Coleman tells the story of how skiing has come to be a major part of American culture. Coleman traces skiing's origins back to Norse and Alpine influences and how it has evolved over the past century into an industry combining recreation, tourism, consumption, and wilderness. Coleman discusses how the meaning of skiing has changed over the years, how sport and leisure in America has come to be about status and style, and how modern consumer culture has merged the mythic West with real western places.

Visitors to Colorado's famous ski resorts embrace alpine adventures, luxurious amenities, and a glamorous nightlife, all against a backdrop of towering mountains and high-drifted snow. Wherever they go in search of fresh powder, one thing is certain: skiing has become a major part of recreational sport and culture and, in the process, dramatically altered America's social, physical, economic, and imaginative landscapes. Annie Coleman has written the first cultural history of skiing in the United States, telling how this European sport evolved into an American industry combining recreation, tourism, consumption, and wilderness-along with a solid dose of exhilaration and a dash of celebrity. She reveals how the meaning of skiing changed over the twentieth century, how sport and leisure in America came to be about status and style as much as about physical activity, and how modern consumer culture merged the mythic West with real western places. Coleman traces skiing from its Norse roots and Alpine influences through the utility of ski travel in the winter Rockies to the rise of Colorado resorts. Much more than a history of the sport, her work explains how the recreation industry sold the experience of skiing and created mythic mountain landscapes with real problems-and a ski culture that exalts celebrity and status over the physical act of skiing. Along the way, Coleman looks at bums, bunnies, betties, and everyone else who uses the sport to define who they are and how they fit in. Today's skiers are more diverse than they were half a century ago (though chances are they're wealthier), and even snowboarders have joined the very culture they once opposed-reviving places like Aspen through a subversive youth culture gone mainstream. The allure of white powder at high altitudes, manicured ski runs designed to frame picture-perfect views, the illusion of danger-the American skiing experience is all of this and more. Extensively researched and engagingly written, Ski Style puts readers on the slopes-and in the lodges-to show what it's really all about. This book is part of the CultureAmerica series.
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