pozorvlak: (Default)
pozorvlak ([personal profile] pozorvlak) wrote2010-01-24 11:05 am

Dressing for success

I was reading in a climbing magazine last night that there's a thriving women's ice-climbing and mountaineering scene in Iran, and even an annual Iranian women's ice-climbing contest. I couldn't find anything on the net about the contest, but I did find this story on the Alpine Club of Iran's website, suggesting that female mountaineering is indeed alive and well in Iran.

Said climbing magazine¹ claimed that part of the reason is that mountaineering is one of the few sports that can be pursued to a high level (or indeed any level) without Islamic dress codes getting in the way.

I can't decide if that's really cool or just messed up.

Edit: some background to my befuddlement is perhaps necessary. In his memoir Mountaineering in Scotland, W.H. Murray talks about a dog of his, who had been up innumerable mountains with him - indeed, she was a better slab climber than he was - and easily met the criteria for joining the Scottish Mountaineering Club, but was barred by reason of her gender. Species was no obstacle. This was despite the many pioneering ascents which had been made by women in both Scotland and the Alps by this time.

¹ which is, of course, Western, and thus perhaps not in possession of the full facts.

[identity profile] wormwood-pearl.livejournal.com 2010-01-24 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Islamic dress codes vary a lot, but generally all the skin apart from the face and hands needs to be covered, along with the hair, and the general shape of the body has to be disguised. The number of layers one usually wears for winter mountaineering would achieve this quite well. And niquabis could cover their faces up with a balaclava :)

[identity profile] necaris.livejournal.com 2010-01-25 09:07 pm (UTC)(link)
+1 true ;-)