This book examines how the growth of tourism in locations that have historically been considered geographically remote plays a major role in the consolidation and transformation of often longstanding and powerful cultural imaginaries about ‘the edges of the world’. The contributors examine the attraction of the sublime, remoteness, continental border-points, and the dangers of the sea in Finisterre (or Fisterra) in Galicia (Spain); Finistère in Brittany (France); Land’s End, Cornwall (England); Lough Derg (Ireland); Nordkapp or North Cape (Norway); Cape Spear, Newfoundland (Canada); and Tierra del Fuego (Argentina). While those travelling to these locations can be seen to be conducting some form of religious or secular pilgrimage, those who live in them have long contended with the implications of economic and political marginalization within global political economies.
Jadual kandungan
1. Sharon R. Roseman and Nieves Herrero: Introduction
2. Nieves Herrero: Galicia’s Finisterre and Coast of Death
3. Charles Menzies: At the End of the Road: Reflections on Finistère, Land’s End, France
4. Michael Ireland: Land’s End, Cornwall, England
5. Lawrence J. Taylor and Maeve Hickey: Pilgrimage to the Edge: Lough Derg and the Moral Geography of Europe and Ireland
6. Jens Kr. Steen Jacobsen: North Cape – In the Land of the Midnight Sun
7. Wayne Fife and Sharon R. Roseman: Where North America Ends
8. Laura M. Horlent and Mónica C. Salemme: Finis Terrae: The End-of-the-World Imaginary in Tierra del Fuego (Argentina)
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Sharon R. Roseman is Professor of Anthropology and Academic Editor of ISER Books at Memorial University of Newfoundland in St. John’s, Canada. She is editor of the European Anthropology in Translation book series (Berghahn).