Abstract
This article examines the contribution of guiding to pilgrims’ negotiation of space and experience of place in religious pilgrimage. Written from an anthropological perspective and limited to selected national, regional, and local Christian pilgrimages in Costa Rica, it focuses on the roles, including mediation, of persons, places, and especially texts—oral, written, and environmental—significant in the guiding process. Data are drawn from relevant literature and the author’s ethnographic and ethnohistorical research in the Republic to explore those elements and both the manner and the contexts in which they help to form pilgrims’ expectations and experience of their sacred journey and its destination.
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