The popularity of the walking pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela across Northern Spain is often understood as a new kind of spiritual tourism rather than a revival of religious practice. In order to examine this claim, I explore common symbolic and ritual practices on the trail such as rock placing, message making, role playing, and partaking in communal play activities. I elaborate the concept of play to explain these behaviors and consider how they relate to transcendental and sacred meanings. This analysis has important implications for explaining the current popularity of the Camino. In particular, it helps explain how the same ritual and symbolic acts may be shared by diverse people with diverse motivations, and how contemporary ritu...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...
Rituals are often used as opportunities for self-reflection and identity construction. The Camino to...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...
The popularity of the walking pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela across Northern Spain is often un...
There is a renewed interest amongst scholars in the practice of pil- grimage. Over the past two deca...
In 2010 almost 272.000 pilgrims completed Camino de Santiago. Even though, it was just about 5.000 p...
In Europe and beyond, pilgrimage centres attract millions of visitors each year. This popularity has...
The characteristics of our society are often contradictory. Despite the "liquidity" theori...
The Camino de Santiago is a Christian pilgrimage in the north of Spain leading to the city of Santia...
The relationship between pilgrimage and religious or devotional practice seems tenuous in contempora...
This is the story of a tradition. One adorned by landscapes, sculpted by men and nature, and lived b...
This article focuses on the emotions pilgrims experience on the road to Santiago de Compostela in th...
Durkheim's study of the social function of religion interprets pilgrimage and tourism as forms of tr...
This study adopts phenomenological, semiotic and symbolic approaches to the study of pilgrimage, fo...
We call upon the concepts of mediatization, circulation, and discussions about the pilgrimage ritual...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...
Rituals are often used as opportunities for self-reflection and identity construction. The Camino to...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...
The popularity of the walking pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela across Northern Spain is often un...
There is a renewed interest amongst scholars in the practice of pil- grimage. Over the past two deca...
In 2010 almost 272.000 pilgrims completed Camino de Santiago. Even though, it was just about 5.000 p...
In Europe and beyond, pilgrimage centres attract millions of visitors each year. This popularity has...
The characteristics of our society are often contradictory. Despite the "liquidity" theori...
The Camino de Santiago is a Christian pilgrimage in the north of Spain leading to the city of Santia...
The relationship between pilgrimage and religious or devotional practice seems tenuous in contempora...
This is the story of a tradition. One adorned by landscapes, sculpted by men and nature, and lived b...
This article focuses on the emotions pilgrims experience on the road to Santiago de Compostela in th...
Durkheim's study of the social function of religion interprets pilgrimage and tourism as forms of tr...
This study adopts phenomenological, semiotic and symbolic approaches to the study of pilgrimage, fo...
We call upon the concepts of mediatization, circulation, and discussions about the pilgrimage ritual...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...
Rituals are often used as opportunities for self-reflection and identity construction. The Camino to...
As modern phenomena, pilgrimages present unique entry points to the study of expressions of meaning ...