[PAST EVENT] Healing Spaces on the Camino de Santiago in Medieval and Contemporary Settings

March 18, 2021
6pm - 7pm
Location
Online
Access & Features
  • Open to the public
  • Registration/RSVP

MUSCARELLE EXPLORATIONS: HEALING BY DESIGN

Healing Spaces on the Camino de Santiago in Medieval and Contemporary Settings

MAR 18  

6 PM, Virtual

Kathleen Jenkins, Professor & Chair, Department of Sociology, Co-Director, Institute for Pilgrimage Studies, William & Mary

Jessica Streit, Assistant Professor of Islamic & Medieval Art, College of Charleston


Jessica Streit will begin the evening presentation with medieval Le Puy-en-Velay, a city that serves as the starting point for one of the four major routes to Santiago de Compostela. Her talk will feature two of the city's 12th-century pilgrimage monuments, showing how they engender feelings of arrival and a desire to keep moving for their audience of pilgrims. Kathleen Jenkins will then bring us to the 21st century. Drawing from her recent ethnography, Walking the Way Together: How Families Connect on the Camino de Santiago, Kathleen will present stories of families investing in pilgrimage as a practice for strengthening kin relationships and becoming a part of each other's emotional and spiritual understandings.

Contact

Phone: 757.221.2700 | [[w|museum]]