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-  2019 

Pilgrim guides and pilgrims in productive complicity: Making the invisible visible in West Java

DOI: 10.1177/1468797617723765

Keywords: ancestors,anthropology,pilgrimage,pilgrim guides,West Java

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Abstract:

There is a growing interest in the anthropology of pilgrimage. However, as Mesaritou et al. have pointed out, the role of pilgrim guides is often peculiarly absent in the literature. The ethnography in this article builds on several pilgrimages together with a local pilgrim guide in West Java. Using this case as an example, the aim is to spur a general interest in how knowledge and authority are constructed when it comes to sites lesser known to the tourist industry (knowledge which may preexist at places that later develop as tourist sites). A key analytical question raised in this article is how guides achieve legitimacy when there exist no authoritative texts or accumulated knowledge about the site. To understand this, I introduce the analytical concept of ‘productive complicity’. The concept is used to describe how an intersubjective understanding about representations of a transcendental reality is developed at the pilgrim site. Being engaged in productive complicity enables pilgrims and their leader to collaborate in ‘reading’ the signs of transcendental presence, to reach agreement that their expectations of the pilgrimage have been fulfilled and to reinforce the legitimacy and authority of the pilgrim guide. The concept of productive complicity is easily transferred to other situations and could be used by scholars to bring out new perspectives on how pilgrim guides as well as tourist guides establish their authority

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