Modern and Medieval Approaches to Pilgrimage,Gender and Sacred Space |
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Authors: | Anne E Bailey |
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Institution: | 1. anne.bailey@hmc.ox.ac.uk |
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Abstract: | This article examines both modern ethnographical, and medieval hagiographical, constructs of sacred space in the context of female pilgrimage. Beginning with an overview of the ways in which anthropological theories of sacred space and gender have informed pilgrimage scholarship over the last fifty years, it focuses in particular on two conceptual models: that which argues that spatial practices employed by cult centres served to distance women from holy places, and that which contends that accommodation was reached between the devotional aspirations of female pilgrims on the one hand, and the institutional policies of the Church on the other. In turning to the Middle Ages, the second part of the article examines narrative representations of sacred space, and reveals that the spatial challenges posed by female pilgrimage in the medieval West were addressed and mediated in hagiography in surprisingly similar ways. |
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Keywords: | Pilgrimage Studies Gender Middle Ages Hagiography Communitas |
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