TOURISM RECREATION RESEA RCH VOL. 39(2), 2014: 235–267
ISSN (print): 0250–8281/ ISSN (online): 2320–0308
©2014 Tourism Recreation Research
http:/ / www.trrworld.org
Research Probe
Is Tourist a Secular Pilgrim or
a Hedonist in Search of Pleasure?
Context
The metaphor of the tourist as pilgrim and tourism as a pilgrimage has
been an important idea in tourism studies, reproduced in both academic
and popular accounts with varying degrees of criticality. This research
probe considers a number of different ways of thinking through the
degree to which tourists could be said to be either secular pilgrims or
hedonists in search of pleasure. As such it considers the meanings, uses
and potential extensions of metaphors of pilgrimage and how these relate
to religion, to tourism and to hedonism, as well as how all of these
categories interconnect. There is no unity of approach to this question
among the authors here and this on the whole makes for a lively and
stimulating debate. Knox and Hannam extend the metaphor of the
pilgrim into the realm of hedonistic tourism through an account of
popular and mass tourist practice which considers the role of religion
and spirituality as objects of tourist practice. Margry makes the case
that secular pilgrim is an oxymoron and that more scholarly effort ought
to be expended on identifying the limited but significant commonalities
between tourism and pilgrimage. Olsen situates the discussion in relation
to secularization and challenges Knox and Hannam’s playful extension
and multiplication of metaphors. Salazar undertakes an analysis of the
emergence and development of metaphors in tourism studies to
demonstrate their continued utility but also the ways in which they shape
representations and understandings. The range of opinions here
represents a sustained reconsideration of established terminologies.
This exclusive department is created to include findings of special significance and to identify
areas of subtle research nuances through mutual debates, discourse and discussions. Elenctic
method is used wherein knowledge progresses through articulation, cross-examination and
rejection of spurious hypotheses. Thus, probe aims at encouraging scholars to think against
the grain by unmasking the stereotype and dogmatic that has taken the mould of research
conservatism. Contact the Editor-in-chief for more details.