[E]xcellent coverage of the part played by mountaineering and its representations in the recuperation of German self-esteem post-1918, and into the evolution of the Bergfilm after 1945. . . . What makes mountain space so interesting from the point of view of the imagination - one of many insights available here -- are the ways in which time can be figured in it . . . . [A] collection whose historical depth and breadth of reference make it a resource for scholars of the spatial imagination.
FORUM FOR MODERN LANGUAGE STUDIES
[A]n invaluable and intellectually lively contribution to a growing international scholarship on the cultural significance of mountains.
ECOZON
[T]urns what could have been a tired exercise in Toposforschung into an absorbing and insightful investigation of geology, history, and culture. . . . Overall, reading this book is in many respects just like climbing a mountain: . . . because, in the end, one can look back and contemplate a magnificent view.
JOURNAL OF EUROPEAN STUDIES
[Gives] extensive, insightful treatment to shifting discursive, cultural, and political valences of mountains in the German imagination. . . . [T]he range of the collection is quite broad. Nonetheless, the . . . essays on poetry, film, literature, and music address a set of related questions. . . . [T]o be praised not only for being the first to treat the cultural meaning of mountains so extensively, but also for tracing their meanings in such variety and depth. . . . Recommended.
CHOICE
In summary? To be sure--to stay with the metaphor - no first ascent, but an impressive high mountain tour that as it goes on opens vistas on not-yet-climbed routes.
GERMAN STUDIES REVIEW
An excellent example of a variety of approaches in interdisciplinary environmental humanities, the volume presents an informative and critical addition to the study of nature representation in German culture . . . .
WOMEN IN GERMAN NEWSLETTER