Publication | Closed Access
Pain, suffering and the consumption of spirituality: a toe story
39
Citations
38
References
2019
Year
Religious SymbolEducationToe StorySpiritual ConsumptionHuman ConditionPilgrimage StudiesChristian PracticeReligious SystemsMedical AnthropologySocial SufferingLanguage StudiesCorporal PainCultural PracticeCultureSpiritual PracticesSpiritualityEthnographyAnthropologyQuebec CompostelaCultural AnthropologyRitual Studies
The article addresses spiritual consumption from a corporal perspective, with a specific focus on pain and suffering as vehicles to a higher spiritual state. It applies a comparative auto-ethnography of the pain that people participating in two pilgrimages – the Camino de Santiago in France and Spain and the Quebec Compostela in Canada – feel in their toes and uses this to discuss how the experience and manifestation of pain actualises the spiritual experience. The results show that corporal pain transforms into a spiritual experience in the way that it connects to both the spiritual features associated with a particular context and the spiritual capital of the person experiencing the pain. They also reveal that displaying corporal pain during rituals – much like the sense of communion that is generated through the act of sharing – fosters further transformations leading to spiritual experiences.
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