This book investigates spiritual tourism - tourism characterised by an intentional search for spiritual benefit - from a contemporary religious studies perspective. Using field research gathered from spiritual tourism locations in Asia and Europe, and utilizing contemporary scholarship on practices concerned with meaning and identity, it explores the phenomena of journeys that are taken for self transformation, tracing the history of transformative ideas in Western cultures of travel, and including the modes in which the travel experience has been communicated. Spiritual Tourism provides an important opportunity to comment on the role of tourism in contemporary conceptions of spirituality and spiritual practice in Western society.
Alex Norman is Lecturer, Tutor and Researcher at the Department of Studies in Religion, University of Sydney, Australia. He is also Co-editor of the journal Literature and Aesthetics.
1. Introduction Part I: Finding Spiritual Tourism in the Field 2. India: The Spiritual Marketplace 3. The Camino de Santiago: The Spiritual Workplace Part II: Theories of Travel and Spirituality 4. Tourism in Popular Culture and History 5. Theories of Leisured Travel 6. Contemporary Spirituality Part III: Understanding Spiritual Tourism in Context 7. India in the Mind of the Spiritual Tourist 8. The Camino de Santiago in the Mind of the Spiritual Tourist 9. Reading Spiritual Tourism Conclusions Appendices Glossary Bibliography Index