Place and Space in Walking Pilgrimage

What kind of experience of territory is produced by walking pilgrimages? Do they generate experiences of place or space as with the definitions provided by Yi-Fu Tuan in Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience? This paper addresses these questions by considering Tuan's distinction betwee...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:The international journal of religious tourism and pilgrimage
Subtitles:"Sacred Journeys 6"
Main Author: Wilson, Ken (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Dublin Institute of Technology [2020]
In: The international journal of religious tourism and pilgrimage
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Tuan, Yi-Fu 1930-2022, Space and place / Pilgrimage / Hiking / Place / Space / Religious experience
B Shepherd, Nan 1893-1981, The living mountain / Poirier, Thelma, Rock Creek / Sinclair, Iain 1943-, London orbital / Spiritual experience
IxTheo Classification:AE Psychology of religion
AG Religious life; material religion
CB Christian life; spirituality
Further subjects:B Space
B Doreen Massey
B Rock Creek
B Saskatchewan
B Iain Sinclair
B London Orbital
B Edward Soja
B walking pilgrimage
B Camino de Santiago
B Michel De Certeau
B Nan Shepherd
B Yi-Fu Tuan
B The Living Mountain
B Thelma Poirier
B Wood Mountain Walk
B Gilles Deleuze
B Place
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Description
Summary:What kind of experience of territory is produced by walking pilgrimages? Do they generate experiences of place or space as with the definitions provided by Yi-Fu Tuan in Space and Place: The Perspective of Experience? This paper addresses these questions by considering Tuan's distinction between space and place and various attempts at deconstructing that binary opposition. It looks at three texts about walking that seem to turn space into place--Nan Shepherd's The Living Mountain, Thelma Poirier's Rock Creek, and Iain Sinclair's London Orbital: A Walk Around the M25--before considering the author's own failure to turn space into place during an improvised walking pilgrimage in southwestern Saskatchewan, Canada. Finally, the paper considers a more recent pilgrimage by the author on the Whithorn Way in Scotland. He concludes that walking pilgrimage actually generates a phenomenal experience of more abstract qualities, ‘placeness' and ‘spaceness,' which are interrelated and interpenetrated, folded together (in a Deleuzian sense), a conclusion that leaves the author ready to re-evaluate his improvised pilgrimage in Saskatchewan as well as the literary accounts he discusses.
ISSN:2009-7379
Contains:Enthalten in: The international journal of religious tourism and pilgrimage
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.21427/8g72-ev39