ABSTRACT

The Spanish Camino de Santiago, a pilgrimage rooted in the Medieval period and increasingly active today, has attracted a growing amount of both scholarly and popular attention. With its multiple points of departure in Spain and other European countries, its simultaneously secular and religious nature, and its international and transhistorical population of pilgrims, this particular pilgrimage naturally invites a wide range of intellectual inquiry and scholarly perspectives. This volume fills a gap in current pilgrimage studies, focusing on contemporary representations of the Camino de Santiago. Complementing existing studies of the Camino’s medieval origins, it situates the Camino as a modern experience and engages interdisciplinary perspectives to present a theoretical framework for exploring the most central issues that concern scholars of pilgrimage studies today.

Contributors explore the contemporary meaning of the Camino through an interdisciplinary lens that reflects the increasing permeability between academic disciplines and fields, bringing together a wide range of theoretical and critical perspectives (cultural studies, literary studies, globalization studies, memory studies, ethnic studies, postcolonial studies, cultural geographies, photography, and material culture). Chapters touch on a variety of genres (blogs, film, graphic novels, historical novels, objects, and travel guides), and transnational perspectives (Australia, the Arab world, England, Spain, and the United States).

chapter |10 pages

Introduction The Camino de Santiago in the 21st Century

Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Global Views

part |67 pages

Historical and Political Perspectives on the Camino

part |66 pages

Literary and Visual Representations of the Camino

part |67 pages

Transformation and Identity in the Camino

chapter |25 pages

Lost and Found

Material Culture and Personal Transformation on the Camino de Santiago

chapter |22 pages

The Australian Way

Transnational Flows and the 21st-Century Camino

chapter |18 pages

The Camino de Santiago as Global Narrative

Literary Representations and Identity Creation