The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012
This original study examines different incarnations of the Pyrenees, beginning with the assumptions of 18th-century geologists, who treated the mountains like a laboratory, and romantic 19th-century tourists and habitués of the spa resorts, who went in search of the picturesque and the sublime. The book analyses the individual visions of the heroic Pyrenees which in turn fascinated 19th-century mountaineers and the racing cyclists of the early Tour de France. Martyn Lyons also investigates the role of the Pyrenees during the Second World War as an escape route from Nazi-occupied France, when for thousands of refugees these dangerous borderlands became 'the mountains of liberty', and considers the place of the Pyrenees in recent times right up to the present day.

Drawing on travel writing, press reports and scientific texts in several languages, The Pyrenees in the Modern Era explores both the French and Spanish sides of the Pyrenees to provide a nuanced historical understanding of the cultural construction of one of Europe's most prominent border regions. This book will be of great interest to scholars and students of Europe's cultural history in a transnational context.
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The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012
This original study examines different incarnations of the Pyrenees, beginning with the assumptions of 18th-century geologists, who treated the mountains like a laboratory, and romantic 19th-century tourists and habitués of the spa resorts, who went in search of the picturesque and the sublime. The book analyses the individual visions of the heroic Pyrenees which in turn fascinated 19th-century mountaineers and the racing cyclists of the early Tour de France. Martyn Lyons also investigates the role of the Pyrenees during the Second World War as an escape route from Nazi-occupied France, when for thousands of refugees these dangerous borderlands became 'the mountains of liberty', and considers the place of the Pyrenees in recent times right up to the present day.

Drawing on travel writing, press reports and scientific texts in several languages, The Pyrenees in the Modern Era explores both the French and Spanish sides of the Pyrenees to provide a nuanced historical understanding of the cultural construction of one of Europe's most prominent border regions. This book will be of great interest to scholars and students of Europe's cultural history in a transnational context.
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The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012

The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012

by Martyn Lyons
The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012

The Pyrenees in the Modern Era: Reinventions of a Landscape, 1775-2012

by Martyn Lyons

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Overview

This original study examines different incarnations of the Pyrenees, beginning with the assumptions of 18th-century geologists, who treated the mountains like a laboratory, and romantic 19th-century tourists and habitués of the spa resorts, who went in search of the picturesque and the sublime. The book analyses the individual visions of the heroic Pyrenees which in turn fascinated 19th-century mountaineers and the racing cyclists of the early Tour de France. Martyn Lyons also investigates the role of the Pyrenees during the Second World War as an escape route from Nazi-occupied France, when for thousands of refugees these dangerous borderlands became 'the mountains of liberty', and considers the place of the Pyrenees in recent times right up to the present day.

Drawing on travel writing, press reports and scientific texts in several languages, The Pyrenees in the Modern Era explores both the French and Spanish sides of the Pyrenees to provide a nuanced historical understanding of the cultural construction of one of Europe's most prominent border regions. This book will be of great interest to scholars and students of Europe's cultural history in a transnational context.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781350024809
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 02/22/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 628 KB

About the Author

Martyn Lyons is Emeritus Professor of History and European Studies at the University of New South Wales, Australia. He is the author of The Writing Culture of Ordinary People in Europe (2012), Books: A Living History (2011) and Post-Revolutionary Europe, 1815-1856 (2006), among other works on revolutionary and Napoleonic France, and on the history of reading practices.
MARTYN LYONS is Professor of History at the University of New South Wales, Australia.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
List of Maps

1. Introduction: The Pyrenean World
2. Romancing the Stones? The Enlightenment Invention of the Pyrenees
3. Visions of the Picturesque: The Romantic Pyrenees
4. Others Among Others
5. The Railway Age and the Coming of Mass Tourism, 1853-1914
6. The Heroic Pyrenees: The Challenge of the Peaks
7. Making the Nation: Cyclists and Excursionists
8. Peoples of the Frontier
9. Dangerous Borderlands, 1936-1945
10. The Anthropological Gaze
11. The Death of Cannelle and the Green Pyrenees
12. The Pyrenees Today

Bibliography
Index
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