On Being Spiritual: Pilgrimage as an Information Context

Nadia Caidi, Perla Innocenti

Research output: Contribution to conferenceOther

Abstract

Religious and secular pilgrimages have been part of human history since the beginning of time and remain very much alive today, whether it is the Holy Land, the Hajj, Lhasa, Kumbh Mela, Char Dham, or else the Camino de Santiago, Kumano Kodo, Glastonbury Tor, Elvis’s Graceland, national parks or war memorials. Pilgrimage has been an object of study across disciplines, in art, architecture, and heritage (Avril et al 2015; Paul Davies 2013), history (Elsner 2005; Janin 2002), literature (Edwards 2005), social anthropology (Badone and
Roseman 2004), religious studies and tourism (Ross-Bryant 2017; Norman and Cusack 2015; Coleman and Elsner 2002; Llyod 1998) among others. Yet, pilgrimage as a context for research in Information Studies has been surprisingly overlooked (exceptions include Bati, 2015; Caidi et al., 2018, along with some foundational work on spirituality by Kari (2007) or Gaston et al. (2015)). This panel fills the gap by offering an information perspective to the study of pilgrimage, shedding a light on approaches and concepts from our field that can enrich our understanding of the complexities of the pilgrim’s journey through the lens of information and media practices, embodied experiences, memory work, curation practices, community-building, information mediation and sharing, and virtuality and pilgrimage in a global and digital world.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 30 Jun 2018
EventISIC 2018: The Information Behaviour Conference - Jagiellonian University, Kraków, Poland
Duration: 9 Oct 201811 Oct 2018
http://www.isic2018.com/

Conference

ConferenceISIC 2018: The Information Behaviour Conference
Abbreviated titleISIC 2018
Country/TerritoryPoland
CityKraków
Period9/10/1811/10/18
Internet address

Keywords

  • pilgrimage
  • Information behavior
  • cultural Heritage
  • Anthropology
  • Sociology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'On Being Spiritual: Pilgrimage as an Information Context'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this