Contenu de l'article

Titre Women's mountaineering and dissonances within the mountain guide profession
Auteur Rozenn Martinoia
Mir@bel Revue Revue de Géographie Alpine
Numéro vol. 101, no 1, 2013 Lever le voile : les montagnes au masculin-féminin
Résumé anglais The mountains are a place for economic activity and work for the guides and a place for fun and recreation for their clients. For each of them, however, the mountains remain a space for social relations, which are woven onto a canvas of representations and pre-existent social relationships, including gender. This article focuses on the ambivalent role of the female clientele in the construction of the gendered professional identity of male mountain guides and its validation by peers. Within a profession normed by a myth of masculinity, female clients may indeed send out dissonant signals: on the one hand, they allow the production of expected signs of masculinity, on the other, they may symbolise a feminisation of professional skills, which, in the hierarchy of gender, is stigmatising. In this respect, the guides negotiate a compromise by manoeuvring between the multiple axiological frameworks, which construct and validate both their gender and professional identities. Supported by an ethnographic survey, this article particularly highlights the prominence of the masculine guide myth which norms interactions within the professional group. It shows why and how guides, essentially by means of discursive artifice, save face in front of their peers.
Source : Éditeur (via OpenEdition Journals)
Article en ligne http://journals.openedition.org/rga/2001