This book looks awesome!
Posts by Tim Chamberlain 🧭
✴️📸Exposition de photos de Katia Buffetrille, "Printemps tibétain", à la Galerie Visconti à Paris
Du 7 au 18 avril 2026
#tibet
Photo of the cover of "Explorers on Screen: Adventure! Danger! Romance!" Edited by Sue Matheson & Cynthia J. Miller (Edinburgh University Press, 2026) illustrated with a photograph of actor Harrison Ford as Indiana Jones on horseback. A moment of high energy, adrenaline and adventure is caught in the arrested glance of the horse's eye, which looks directly out of the image, echoed by Indiana Jones's angry look of concentrated determination and fearful concern.
We now have a cover! 😊
"Explorers on Screen: Adventure! Danger! Romance!" Sue Matheson & Cynthia J. Miller, eds. (Edinburgh University Press: June, 2026).
Full Info: edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-explore...
#exploration #film #history #empire #place #gender 🗃️
New podcast! Talking with @peterhhansen.bsky.social about how #mountaineering & #modernity emerged together & how the idea of the 'summit position' came to encompass concepts of sovereignty and empire from the #Alps to #Everest.
shorturl.at/oI5fh
@waymarks.bsky.social @calmandfearless.bsky.social
BBC are currently replaying their 1981 adaptation of James Hilton's Lost Horizon. #Orientalism on steroids with some very questionable accents.
www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/serie...
Recommend @waymarks.bsky.social #OtherEverests chapter on Western escapism in the #Himalaya for context shorturl.at/Pchxp
बाउ को धुरी छैन “Father Has No Roof over his head”
An #OtherEverests #ConfluenceCollective exhibition in Kalimpong 21-27 February 2026 shorturl.at/YrbVv
Lost archives & hidden histories of Indigenous high-altitude workers from the 1920s & 1930s.
@waymarks.bsky.social @andrewwyatt.bsky.social
Forthcoming for historians of exploration & film studies:
"Explorers on Screen: Adventure! Danger! Romance!" Sue Matheson, Cynthia J. Miller, eds. (Edinburgh University Press: June, 2026).
Full Info: edinburghuniversitypress.com/book-explore...
#exploration #film #history #empire #place #gender 🗃️
New on advance access: "Tibetan Gift-Giving, British Indifference, and the Erasure of Provenance in Colonial India"
by @tibetcurator.bsky.social (@uomsalc.bsky.social)
#OpenAccess
doi.org/10.1093/past...
Check out @waymarks.bsky.social's review of @sbilston.bsky.social's "The Lost Orchid: A Story of Victorian Plunder and Obsession," published in 2025 by @harvardpress.bsky.social; review now available @hnetreviews.bsky.social #envhist #envhum #plantstudies
www.h-net.org/reviews/show...
'Mountain Man' - glaciologist, Phuntsho Tshering, the only man permitted in Bhutan’s sacred mountains chronicles humanity’s impact.
Check out @waymarks.bsky.social's review of @josephaseeley.bsky.social's "Border of Water and Ice: The Yalu River and Japan's Empire in Korea and Manchuria," published in 2024 by @cornellupress.bsky.social; review now available @hnetreviews.bsky.social
networks.h-net.org/group/review...
Welcome aboard!
It's an absolutely brilliant and fascinating book. As you could probably tell from my review, I really enjoyed reading it!
"Border of Water and Ice is a fascinating, richly researched, and accessibly recounted history that will appeal to a wide range of scholars variously interested in empires, environments, borderlands, and area studies" Thank you @waymarks.bsky.social for the close reading!
🌟 New blog post ✍️
There have been many books about Sherpa mountaineers over the years, but few have been written from the perspective of Sherpas themselves ⛏️🗻
One that comes close is Sherpa by Pradeep Bashyal and Ankit Babu Adhikari, which I read recently 📚
www.markhorrell.com/blog/2025/12...
There was also a recently published 'reply' to "The Outsider", written from the perspective of the unnamed Arab's brother: "The Meursault Investigation" (2015) by Kamel Daoud.
Junko Tabei became the first woman to reach the summit of Chomolungma 50 years ago this week. Jenny Hall recounts this milestone and considers why she isn't more celebrated:
theconversation.com/fifty-years-...
That's right! - I cited your 'Speech of the Subaltern Transcribed' article which was really useful for me in thinking through elements of one of my chapters which might be of interest to you ... (Chapter 5). Many thanks! - Good to know Google Scholar works (sometimes, at least)!
I've just been alerted to @waymarks.bsky.social's PhD dissertation 'Empirical adventurers: Science and imperial exploration in East Tibet, 1900-1949', which is well worth a look here: eprints.bbk.ac.uk/id/eprint/55.... Lots of interesting stuff happening in the mountain history space!
Thanks, Ariana - that's very kind. Hope there might be something of interest in there for you!
Many thanks, Mikko. Your post is the first notification I've had that it's been uploaded to the college library's website! - Feeling more than slightly trepidatious knowing it's finally out there making its way into the big wide world.
Yep, that World History one and the one on Archaeology were my favs! - Hopefully my old copies went on to similarly inspire/entertain someone else in the way they did me.
I remember kids fighting over the ghosts and monsters ones in our school library!
Ha, ha! - I really wish I'd kept hold of mine. I'd love to look back at them now. I had quite a few history ones and would spend hours looking at all the really intricate drawings in them, plus an excellent Science Dictionary.
Usborne books were the best!
That's barely enough time to properly sharpen a pencil.
I agree. I had to use the Harvard referencing system (Repeatedly, 1994) throughout my undergraduate degree (Repeatedly, 1997). I've always thought it's like being poked in the eye (Repeatedly, 1994, Poked, 1997) while reading (Repeatedly, 1994; Repeatedly, 1997). But cool, re: MA essay>> article. 😎👍
The cover of Exploration Map by Map.
A section on the Mexica.
A section on the Magellan-Elcano expedition.
A section on Orellan’s journey down the Amazon.
Great to see Exploration Map by Map out in print. I had a blast writing about some epic feats of exploration & migration in Latin America, from the Mexica to Magellan.
Beautifully illustrated with specially commissioned maps, it’s on sale now: www.dk.com/uk/book/9780...
There always used to be a blue Trabant parked in one of the back streets near the University of London's Senate House. I'm not sure if it's still there these days, but always used to make me smile whenever I saw it there.
Today's news reminds me of the first visit of women to the South Pole in 1969