Turismo religioso y gestión de peregrinaciones
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.25145/j.pasos.2016.14.089Keywords:
pilgrimage, Religion, Religious tourismAbstract
In recent years, religion has been on the agenda of the mass media, either as the central axis of a series of conflicts materialized or channeled by terrorism, or as the impossibilities of a medieval institution whose problems lie in a certain impossibility to respond to the needs of its parishioners. For a long time it was thought that capitalist industrialization would bring about the irreducible death of religion, but far from that, a greater number of people are preparing to travel to centers of pilgrimage and do religious tourism around the world. Dean MacCannell emphasized tourism as a continuation of religion. If for the indigenous world the totem confers a certain protection and identity on the community, tourism has the same function in modern society. However, within this scheme, where do we locate the religious tourism, is this phenomenon a proof of social breakdown as MacCannell (1976) anticipated or an undeniable reality that religion still plays an important role in society?
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References
Cardona, J. R., Criado, M. D. C. A., Cantallops, A. S., 2015. “El Míto del Paraiso perdido en la definición del destino turístico”. Estudios y Perspectivas en Turismo, 24(3), 697-717.
Korstanje, M. 2009. Interpretando el Génesis del Descanso: una aproximación a los mitos y rituales del turismo. Pasos. Revista de Turismo y Patrimonio Cultural, 7(1), 99-113.
Korstanje, M., & Busby, G. 2010. “Understanding the Bible as the roots of physical displacement: the origin of tourism”. E-Review of Tourism Research, 8(3), 95-111.
MacCannell, D. 1976. The tourist: A new theory of the leisure class. Berkeley, University of California Press.
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