TY - JOUR
T1 - Social Production and Consumption of Space
T2 - A Lefebvrian Analysis of the Kumbh Mela
AU - Buzinde, Christine
AU - Manuel-Navarrete, David
AU - Kalavar, Jyotsna M.
AU - Kohli, Neena
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was mainly supported by a generous grant from the Institute of Humanities Research (IHR) at Arizona State University as well as a supplemental funds from two agencies at Penn State University, namely the Children’s Youth and Family Consortium (CYFC) and Global Programs. The authors extend their gratitude to the Kumbh Mela attendants who participated in this study as well as the graduate students from the department of Psychology at Allahabad University, India who assisted with data collection. We gratefully acknowledge the help we received for this project from Vipul Kumar, Shreshtha Yadava, Vivek Shahi, Chitra Kohli, Dallen Timothy.
Funding Information:
This study was mainly supported by a generous grant from the Institute of Humanities Research (IHR) at Arizona State University as well as a supplemental funds from two agencies at Penn State University, namely the Children?s Youth and Family Consortium (CYFC) and Global Programs. The authors extend their gratitude to the Kumbh Mela attendants who participated in this study as well as the graduate students from the department of Psychology at Allahabad University, India who assisted with data collection. We gratefully acknowledge the help we received for this project from Vipul Kumar, Shreshtha Yadava, Vivek Shahi, Chitra Kohli, Dallen Timothy.
Publisher Copyright:
© International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - Kumbh Mela is the world’s largest pilgrimage gathering on the shores of the River Ganges. Drawing on Lefebvre’s (1991) trialectics of space framework, this paper interrogates the spatial dynamics of the Kumbh Mela through the spatial meanings espoused by local and international pilgrims. Accounting for dominant discourses that frame the event as occurring in and around a sacred waterscape, five focus groups with pilgrims were conducted at the Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, India. The findings indicate that local pilgrims were aware of river pollution, but they used discursive strategies to decouple this material fact from their lived spiritual experiences; from this vantage point the sacred was believed to be insulated from the secular. International pilgrims’ perceptions significantly differed, from those of their local counterparts, in that the sacred waterscape was seen as polluted and the onus was on them to remedy what they believed locals had neglected to do; for this group cleaning the River was a sacred act. The findings indicate that despite the existence of dominant spatial conceptualisations of a sacred waterscape, through use of the space, new and often competing spatial meanings arise that illuminate our understanding of the human condition and the social relations therewithin.
AB - Kumbh Mela is the world’s largest pilgrimage gathering on the shores of the River Ganges. Drawing on Lefebvre’s (1991) trialectics of space framework, this paper interrogates the spatial dynamics of the Kumbh Mela through the spatial meanings espoused by local and international pilgrims. Accounting for dominant discourses that frame the event as occurring in and around a sacred waterscape, five focus groups with pilgrims were conducted at the Kumbh Mela in Allahabad, India. The findings indicate that local pilgrims were aware of river pollution, but they used discursive strategies to decouple this material fact from their lived spiritual experiences; from this vantage point the sacred was believed to be insulated from the secular. International pilgrims’ perceptions significantly differed, from those of their local counterparts, in that the sacred waterscape was seen as polluted and the onus was on them to remedy what they believed locals had neglected to do; for this group cleaning the River was a sacred act. The findings indicate that despite the existence of dominant spatial conceptualisations of a sacred waterscape, through use of the space, new and often competing spatial meanings arise that illuminate our understanding of the human condition and the social relations therewithin.
KW - Ganges
KW - India
KW - Kumbh Mela
KW - Pilgrimage
KW - Sacred waterscapes
KW - Trialectics of space
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M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85128876498
SN - 2009-7379
VL - 10
SP - 178
EP - 188
JO - International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
JF - International Journal of Religious Tourism and Pilgrimage
IS - 1
ER -