New Pilgrimage Routes and Trails  Paid

by Daniel H. Olsen (Edited), Dane Munro (Edited), Ian S. McIntosh (Edited)
©2023, Edited Collection, VIII, 312 Pages
Theology & Philosophy

Series: Pilgrimage Studies, Volume 2

SOFTCOVER

eBook


Since the dawn of humanity, people have traveled in search of meaning and to petition for worldly and otherworldly blessings. In the twenty-first century, the number of people traveling to religious sacred sites on pilgrimage has increased more than at any point in human history. An increased demand for pilgrimage routes and trails with the spiritual rather than the religious walker in mind, has also led various enterprising groups and individuals to develop entirely new pilgrimage routes and trails. This book highlights this new chapter in pilgrimage and trail development with essays by pilgrimage scholars and practitioners working in over ten countries.

These include an examination of circular pilgrimage in The Netherlands, weird or «antipilgrimages» in the UK, and the revitalization of ancient trails along the Old Way to Canterbury, in the Baltic States, and on the Kumano Kodo in Japan. Entirely new trails include the Sufi Trail in Turkey, the Western Front Way in Europe, the Abraham Path in Southwest Asia, the Mormon Canadian Trail, and various new religious-themed trails in Lebanon. Human rights pilgrimages include one focused on peace building in Indigenous Australia, another on Indigenous settler pilgrimage protocols in Canada, and an emancipation pilgrimage along the Underground Railroad in the United States.

  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • About the author
  • About the book
  • This eBook can be cited
  • Contents
  • List of Illustrations
  • 1 Developing New Religious Pilgrimage Routes and Trails - Daniel H. Olsen, Dane Munro, and Ian S. Mcintosh
  • 2 Saving Ourselves and Saving the Earth: New Circular Pilgrimage Routes in the Netherlands - Dane Munro
  • 3 Virtual and Hybrid Pilgrimage: Fictioning, Weird Realism, and Privileged Points - Phil Smith
  • 4 The Ghosts of Past and Future along England’s Old Way - Kathryn R. Barush
  • 5 Developing New Routes across North Europe: Walking in the Baltic States and England - John Eade and Tiina Sepp
  • 6 The Western Front Way: Connecting Points of War to Form a Path of Peace - Heather A. Warfield
  • 7 Religious, Economic and Political Considerations for Developing and Promoting New Pilgrimages Routes in Southern Lebanon - Nour Farra-Haddad
  • 8 The Abraham Path: A Pilgrimage in Time - Anisa Mehdi
  • 9 Turkey’s Sufi Trail: Revitalising a Medieval Pilgrimage - Iris Bezuijen and Sedat ÇAkır
  • 10 The Emergence of the Kumano Kodō as a Contemporary Pilgrimage Destination - Ricardo Nicolas Progano
  • 11 Walking for Justice and Reconciliation in Australia - Ian S. Mcintosh
  • 12 The Promise and Peril of Walking Indigenous Territorial Recognitions Carried Out by Canadian Settlers - Matthew Anderson And Ken Wilson
  • 13 Religious Theming as a Strategy for Tourism Development: The Case of Canada’s Mormon Trail - Daniel H. Olsen and W. Jack Stone
  • 14 The Pilgrim’s Pathway: Emancipation Pilgrimage on the Underground Railroad - Peggy Eppig
  • 15 Forging ahead on New Trails of Faith - Dallen J. Timothy
  • Notes on Contributors
  • Index
  • Series index
Pages:
VIII, 312
Year:
2023
ISBN (PAPERBACK):
9781800790797 (Active)
ISBN (EPUB):
9781800790810 (Active)
ISBN (MOBI):
9781800790827 (Forthcoming)
ISBN (PDF):
9781800790803 (Active)
Language:
English
Published:
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, New York, Wien, 2023. VIII, 312 pp., 7 fig. b/w.

Daniel H. Olsen is a Professor in the Department of Geography at Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah, USA. His research interests revolve around pilgrimage, tourism, and spirituality. He has published over 70 articles and book chapters, and is co-editor of Tourism, Religion and Spiritual Journeys (2006), Religious Pilgrimage Routes and Trails: Sustainable Development and Management (2018), Dark Tourism and Pilgrimage (2020), Religious Tourism and the Environment (2020), and The Routledge Handbook of Religious and Spiritual Tourism (2022).

Dane Munro is a Resident Academic at the Institute for Tourism, Travel and Culture (ITTC) at the University of Malta. His academic educational trajectory is marked by an MA in the Classics and a PhD in the cultural anthropology of pilgrimage and faith-based tourism at the University of Malta. He has also obtained a Ph.D. in history at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, regarding the culture of memoria and the identity of the knights of the Order of St John throughout the ages.

Australian anthropologist and pilgrimage scholar Ian S. McIntosh is the Director of International Partnerships at IUPUI. He is the founder of the Sacred Journeys project that brings pilgrimage scholars together from across the world for an annual conference. He has authored and co-edited four books on pilgrimage and peace-building including Pilgrimage: Walking to Peace, Walking for Change, The Many Voices of Pilgrimage and Reconciliation, Pilgrimage in Practice, and Peace Journeys. He has also authored three books on Aboriginal Australian religion. Dr. McIntosh is also the co-founder of the Australia-based heritage group, Past Masters International, which works closely with Indigenous Australians in the mapping and protection of heritage areas and sacred sites.

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