Close to the Edge

Imagining Climbing in Southeast Queensland

Authors

  • Michael Meadows Griffith University
  • Robert Thomson
  • Wendy Stewart University of Queensland
  • Wendy Stewart University of Queensland

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600002221

Keywords:

Climbing World Finals 1992, Albertville Winter Olympics, Australian Indoor Climbing Gyms Association Incorporated, climbing

Abstract

In 1992, the Climbing World Finals event in Birmingham attracted around 5,000 spectators to watch 24 males and 16 females compete in two separate competitions for prize money. In this entertainment spectacular, super-fit young athletes climbed walls using artificial hand and footholds, racing against the clock to determine who would claim the title of the world's ‘best’ climber. In the same year, climbing appeared as a demonstration sport at the Albertville Winter Olympics. And also in the same year, the first indoor climbing gymnasium in Australia opened its climbing wall. There are now around 80 operating around the country under the auspices of the Australian Indoor Climbing Gyms Association Incorporated.

Author Biographies

  • Michael Meadows, Griffith University

    Michael Meadows was an active climber in the late 1960s and early 1970s, and has drawn from that experience and his background in journalism and media studies for his research on climbing in southeast Queensland. He is an Associate Professor in the School of Film, Media and Cultural Studies at Griffith University.

  • Robert Thomson

    Robert Thomson is an active bushwalker and historian who has been researching the history of settlement in the Upper Albert and Logan River valleys for several years. More recently, he has worked as a Research Assistant on the project on climbing in southeast Queensland, funded by the Australian Research Council.

  • Wendy Stewart, University of Queensland

    Wendy Stewart is an active climber and kayaker and was recently part of a joint Australian-Russian team to climb the highest peak in Siberia and to canoe down one of its largest rivers. She was a Research Assistant on the project on climbing in southeast Queensland and is now Associate Lecturer in the Department of Tourism and Leisure Management at the University of Queensland.

  • Wendy Stewart, University of Queensland

    Wendy Stewart is an active climber and kayaker and was recently part of a joint Australian-Russian team to climb the highest peak in Siberia and to canoe down one of its largest rivers. She was a Research Assistant on the project on climbing in southeast Queensland and is now Associate Lecturer in the Department of Tourism and Leisure Management at the University of Queensland.

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Published

2000-10-01

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Meadows, M., Thomson, R., Stewart, W., & Stewart, W. (2000). Close to the Edge: Imagining Climbing in Southeast Queensland. Queensland Review, 7(2), 67-83. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1321816600002221