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The Seductions of Pilgrimage
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Table of Contents

Foreword, Jas’ Elsner; Introduction: pilgrimage and seduction in the Abrahamic tradition, Michael A. Di Giovine and David Picard; Purity as danger? Seduction and sexuality at Walsingham, Simon Coleman; The seductions of guiding: Jewish-Israeli tour guides on the Christian Holy Land pilgrimage, Jackie Feldman; ‘As if the road there is covered with honey’: inquiries into the seductiveness of a Greek orthodox monastery in Arizona for Russian orthodox parish pilgrims, Julia Klimova; The seductiveness of saints: interreligious pilgrimage sites in Hatay and the ritual transformations of agency, Jens Kreinath; The seduction of the past in new age pilgrimage, Jill Dubisch; Seduction in the ‘Gypsy pilgrimage’ at Les-Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer, Ellen Badone; Seductions of suffering: stigmata, salvation and pilgrimage to the sanctuary of St. Padre Pio in San Giovanni Rotondo, Michael A. Di Giovine; The seductions of the way: the return of the pilgrim and the road to Compostela as a liminal space, Eduardo Chemin; ‘Up In God’s great cathedral’: evangelism, astronauts, and the seductiveness of outer space, Deana L. Weibel; Index.

About the Author

Michael A. Di Giovine is an anthropologist with major research interests in comparative religion, pilgrimage, tourism and heritage policy. He is Assistant Professor of Anthropology in the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at West Chester University, and an Honorary Fellow in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Michael is the author of The Heritage-scape: UNESCO, World Heritage and Tourism, the co-editor of Tourism and the Power of Otherness: Seductions of Difference, also with David Picard, and Edible Identities: Food and Foodways as Cultural Heritage with Ronda Brulotte. He has published extensively on the practices and the ethics behind the heritage and tourism fields.

David Picard is an anthropologist working at the University of Lausanne in Switzerland, with research interests in tourism, hospitality, sustainable development and winemaking. He has carried out research in the Western Indian Ocean (mainly La Réunion and Madagascar), Australia, Portugal and Argentina/Antarctica. His main publications include a single-authored book, Tourism, Magic and Modernity and five edited volumes, Festivals, Tourism and Social Change, The Framed World, Emotion in Motion, Couchsurfing Cosmopolitanisms, and Tourism and the Power of Otherness, also with Michael A. Di Giovine.

Reviews

‘This captivating collection of essays addresses an important contemporary challenge for the anthropology of pilgrimage. Through ethnographically rich chapters this book demonstrates the central role of seduction in the experience of contemporary pilgrims.’ Anna Fedele, CRIA-University Institute of Lisbon, Portugal, author of Looking for Mary Magdalene ‘The contributions in The Seductions of Pilgrimage contain a wealth of detail about the ways the modalities of early religious pilgrimage spill over into contemporary tourist experience. Collectively they shed a bright light on the religious roots of assumptions about the seductive and transformative powers of travel. The introduction by Di Giovine and Picard establishes a strong rationale for incorporating analysis of seduction in religious and tourism studies.’ Dean MacCannell, University of California, Davis, USA, author of The Tourist and The Ethics of Sightseeing ‘Historical commentaries and fieldwork-derived insights on the sensory delights, dangers, digressions and paradoxes of pilgrimage frame this alluring volume, which tempts us to reconsider the meanings, attractions and multi-functionality of pilgrimage in the twenty-first century. Literally concentrating on the sensational, and casting fresh light on some familiar sites and scholarly apparatus in the study of pilgrimage, this important and intriguing collection contributes valuably to our evolving understanding and appreciation of pilgrimage as a complex phenomenon which practitioners and scholars alike find endlessly entrancing.’ Marion Bowman, The Open University, UK, co-editor of Vernacular Religion in Everyday Life‘The book will appeal not just to scholars, but also to a general readership having an interest in spiritual philosophy and pilgrimage. Even tourism policy-makers and destination management organizations in nations or markets where pilgrimage tourism is important will find this book useful. In sum, the lessons in this book can contribute to a better understanding of the roles of tangible and intangible assets in keeping the pilgrim sites attractive and relevant.’Jeet Dogra, Indian Institute of Tourism and Travel Management, in Annals of Tourism Research, 60 (September 2016)‘A rich tapestry of contexts and perspectives on the topic. … Of special interest for those looking for some stimulating reading for their own reflections on the Pilgrimage of Justice and Peace.’Martin Robra, Special Advisor to the General Secretary, World Council of Churches, in The Ecumenical Review, 68:4 (December 2016)'In all, this a very worthy collection that will lead readers in a multitude of global and religious directions of potential value...'Frederick J. Ruf, Associate Professor of Theology at Georgetown University, in Reading Religion (2018)'This volume consists of very interesting, well-written, and storng contributions by fine scholars in the area of pilgrimage studies.'Apostolos Andrikopoulos, University of Amsterdam, in the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (N.S.) 25, 390-427 (2019)

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