Extreme Sports
What draws people to extreme physical challenge? Sarah Lonsdale on climber Dorothy Pilley, and Carl Morris on the culture and history of endurance running. Laurie Taylor presents.
What can the worlds of mountaineering and endurance running reveal about changing ideas of freedom, identity and the body? Laurie Taylor talks to Sarah Lonsdale, Senior Lecturer in Journalism at City, University of London, about her new book Wildly Different - her study of early 20th‑century women who sought autonomy through outdoor adventure. She focuses on the mountaineer Dorothy Pilley, whose Alpine achievements and reflective writing challenged prevailing assumptions about femininity and physical capability.
In 'Dirtbag Dreams', Carl Morris (sociologist, historian and social psychologist from the University of Lancashire) explores the history of mountain, ultra and trail running in the US and Britain from its origins right up until today. He asks if the ever-increasing popularity of these sports risk making them overly commercial and corporate? A keen fell runner himself, Morris examines the distinctive values that shape these endurance communities, including ideas of authenticity, self‑sufficiency and the pursuit of physical extremity.
Producer: Natalia Fernandez
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Guests and further reading
- Carl Morris, Senior Lectuer in Social Psychology at the University of Lancashire
- Sarah Lonsdale – Senior Lecturer in Journalism at City St George’s, University of London
Further Reading:
- Dirtbag dreams - A history of mountain, ultra and trail running by Carl Morris (Manchester University Press, 2025)
- Wildly different - Five women who reclaimed nature in a man's world by Sarah Lonsdale (Manchester University Press, 2025)
Broadcasts
- Tue 3 Mar 202615:30BBC Radio 4
- Last Sunday06:05BBC Radio 4
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