Article abstracts
Translations : Cary Bartsch
Written for people looking for information with meaning,
L'Alpe is the first review devoted to the many cultures and heritages
of Alpine Europe. Its ambition is to provide information, language
barriers not withstanding. As your guide, L'Alpe looks at the people
who, from the meandering Danube to the Rhône, have adapted to
an exceptional climate. A cross between a book and a magazine, it
draws on the first to provide background documents on a main theme,
supported by rigorous analysis, an insistence on quality and the notoriety
of renown authors. From the second, it adopts a quarterly rhythm for
regular contributions to current debates, rich illustrations, the
insatiable curiosity of its journalists and a necessarily didactic
approach. Though rigorous in its approach to knowledge, L'Alpe is
not a scientific journal. It calls on the contributions of history,
geography, archaeology, ethnology, etc. to shed light on the meaning
of the traces left by man on the mountain environment. And it is also
open to current debates on the future of the Alps and other mountains
in the world.
The Alps, a womans world?
Just like the men, the women did their share of work in the
fields and the mountain pastures. Life was tough for the Alpine peasants
and constituted a paradoxical tribute for a very relative degree of
liberty and autonomy that the women farther below had not yet achieved.
An equal standing with respect to work that should not be confused
with true equality.
Good times in the pastures
Free and happy, the young women from Lecco tended to the family
herds in the mountains overlooking the Lago di Como. The summers were
pleasant and all the more so when their suitors came to visit by night.
A world cut in two
A matriarchy? Or simple stand-ins? The men took off to earn
a living in the towns and cities while the women were left to handle
the work in the fields and assume the family responsibilities. An
ambivalent situation in which the heavy work and the isolation conferred
on the mountain women a share of autonomy and equality unknown elsewhere.
The shepherdesses speak
Young, often city-bred and increasingly numerous, women are
now finding their vocation in the shepherding trade, to the content
of one and all. Exit the stereotypes of yesteryear, with distaff and
spinning wheel, but their incursion in a male-dominated world is not
always easy. Accounts.
Nursing nannies
Abundant milk was their unique source of livelihood. In certain
parts of the Italian Alps, young mothers had to abandon their child
and village to nurse the children of the bourgeois families in the
cities. An uncommon and painful way to emigrate.
Haute couture on the high
Flower girls and butterfly women in the Maurienne valley have
long been a source of admiration for all who come across them. For
example, the young English woman Estella Canziani at the start of
the last century who portrayed the shimmering colours of their costumes
in her watercolour paintings. The festive clothing is still worn today
and bears witness to an exceptional degree of creativity.
A Joan of Arc from the Dauphiné?
A proud Amazon in bronze, she leads her troops into battle
under the branches of the tall trees in the Jardin des Dauphins in
Grenoble. The passing visitor cannot but be intrigued on reading 'Philis
de la Charce, Heroine of the Dauphiné". What fabulous
deeds warranted the statue of the warring woman? Somewhere between
history and legend, the story of a woman involved in her times.
The Sherpanis of Mount Rose
A large basket strapped to their back, they carried the belongings
of the tourists calling on their services in the mountains. With their
knowledge of all the trails and accustomed to heavy loads, these Italian
women earned their living as porters, similar to the Sherpanis in
the Himalayas.
An imposing person
Three old women in a mountain village. Using very simple words,
commonplace stories, insignificant details and bits and pieces of
lives written admirably well, Ludwig Hohl has attained near parabolic
perfection in this fundamental and profoundly human text.
The country where women could
(truly) rule
In the Pyrenees, an uncommon set of customs offered women
social positions far ahead of their time in a Europe still dominated
by the most blatant sexist attitudes. A law of the 'house" that
was not without consequences on the sex life of these very liberated
mountain women.
Mama or whore?
The image of women in the New Art movement in Switzerland
is perfectly clear. In spite of the ideas of the suffragettes gaining
ground in the Alps, the women portrayed by the symbolic painters still
represent the harmony of an Alpine Eden. Perhaps a complacent vision
of the final lines of Faust II by Goethe, concerning the eternal feminine
drawing us up to the light.
Local people, women from afar
Beautiful foreigners are now the wedded wives of the peasants
in the high valleys abandoned by the Tyrolean women. In these rural
areas still set in the ancient ways, the mountain men could no longer
find a mate. So they went looking beyond the borders, from Poland
to the Philippines.
Portfolio - Erika Hubatschek,
a life spent in steep places
Photography as a geographic undertaking. For more than sixty
years, Erika Hubatschek, an Austrian geographer turned photographer,
has been roaming the Tyrolean mountain pastures to collect fragments
of a disappearing world, that of the Alpine communities. By partaking
in the lives of the mountain farmers and working at their side, she
has listened to them and above all observed them like no other photographer.
No, the glaciers are not melting!
With factual evidence, a glaciologist contests the alarming
statements found in numerous media concerning the eventual disappearance
of glaciers due to global warming. Counterpoint.
The writing walls
Ground into the walls of the sheep barns in the Crau, hundreds
of inscriptions recount the passage of shepherds. The doubly lapidary
graffiti, requiring long and slow interpretation, reveal brief excerpts
of their lives and constitute true archives of Alpine transhumances.