Event Title
El Camino de Santiago: un supermercado espiritual
Location
Diamond 153
Start Date
30-4-2015 1:20 PM
End Date
30-4-2015 3:55 PM
Project Type
Presentation
Description
In 2014, over 237,000 pilgrims walked the Camino de Santiago, or Way of Saint James. This Christian pilgrimage to Santiago in northern Spain is over 1200 years old but saw a massive revival in 1993 when it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Motivations to walk vary from tourism to Christian expression. I study five cultural works that represent a contemporary journey along the French Way, and I argue that they guide the user to walk with a spiritual do-it-yourself attitude. I argue that these works show disenchantment with contemporary Christianity and modern tourism, encouraging nostalgia-driven motives for walking, specifically along the routes extension to Fisterre (Lands End). While the official Christian pilgrimage ends in Santiago, the works studied promote this extension to Fisterre, thus contradicting the religious motivation in which the pilgrimage concludes at the Cathedral of Santiago. In continuing to Fisterre, pilgrims seek a sunset rather than the remains of Saint James the Apostle as the conclusion to their spiritual voyage. While no longer fundamentally religious in nature, walking the Camino provides the pilgrim with an alternative form of tourism and an open space to practice personal spirituality.
Faculty Sponsor
Jorge Olivares
Sponsoring Department
Colby College. Spanish Dept.
CLAS Field of Study
Humanities
Event Website
http://www.colby.edu/clas
ID
1597
El Camino de Santiago: un supermercado espiritual
Diamond 153
In 2014, over 237,000 pilgrims walked the Camino de Santiago, or Way of Saint James. This Christian pilgrimage to Santiago in northern Spain is over 1200 years old but saw a massive revival in 1993 when it was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Motivations to walk vary from tourism to Christian expression. I study five cultural works that represent a contemporary journey along the French Way, and I argue that they guide the user to walk with a spiritual do-it-yourself attitude. I argue that these works show disenchantment with contemporary Christianity and modern tourism, encouraging nostalgia-driven motives for walking, specifically along the routes extension to Fisterre (Lands End). While the official Christian pilgrimage ends in Santiago, the works studied promote this extension to Fisterre, thus contradicting the religious motivation in which the pilgrimage concludes at the Cathedral of Santiago. In continuing to Fisterre, pilgrims seek a sunset rather than the remains of Saint James the Apostle as the conclusion to their spiritual voyage. While no longer fundamentally religious in nature, walking the Camino provides the pilgrim with an alternative form of tourism and an open space to practice personal spirituality.
https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/clas/2015/program/377