Padre Pio for sale: souvenirs, relics, or identity markers? Online publication date: Sat, 16-Aug-2014
by Michael A. Di Giovine
International Journal of Tourism Anthropology (IJTA), Vol. 2, No. 2, 2012
Abstract: Based on long-term ethnographic research, this paper examines the role of material culture (objects, souvenirs, art and built structures) in the contemporary Catholic cult of St. Padre Pio of Pietrelcina, particularly how it is created, contextualised, contested, and consumed by pilgrims at Pio's shrine of San Giovanni Rotondo. The shrine's managers have frequently been criticised for its commercialism and invasive nature. While some critiques are warranted, this paper argues that they fail to consider deeper meanings of these objects. In particular, they are conceived of as relics - social and spiritual mediators - that connect the pilgrim with the saint and with other devotees; they are also identity markers whose employment by diverse groups within the cult both index and construct deeply held cosmological notions of their relationship to Pio and the supernatural. The examination of these factors, therefore, ultimately provides a valuable look at the discourses and practices during the formation of a major saint's cult.
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