High altitude climbers as ethnomethodologists making sense of cognitive dissonance: ethnographic insights from an attempt to scale Mt. Everest
by Shaunna Burke, Andrew C. Sparkes, Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson
Reference:
Shaunna Burke, Andrew C. Sparkes, Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson, (2008), "High altitude climbers as ethnomethodologists making sense of cognitive dissonance: ethnographic insights from an attempt to scale Mt. Everest", Sport Psychologist, vol. 22, no. 3, pp. 336–355.
Bibtex Entry:
@ARTICLE{Burke2008,
  author = "Shaunna Burke, Andrew C. Sparkes and Jacquelyn Allen-Collinson", 
  doi = "10.1123/tsp.22.3.336", 
  keywords = "Ethnomethodology, High Altitude Climbers, Cognitive Dissonance", 
  journal = "Sport Psychologist", 
  number = "3", 
  pages = "336–355", 
  title = "High altitude climbers as ethnomethodologists making sense of cognitive dissonance: ethnographic insights from an attempt to scale Mt. Everest", 
  url = "https://journals.humankinetics.com/view/journals/tsp/22/3/article-p336.xml", 
  volume = "22", 
  year = "2008", 
}