Daniel Gittelman- Liminality (Image and Pilgrimage in Christian Culture)

Liminality is the in-between. It is a transition in life that will vary in difficulty and formality from person to person. It is an unknown that Victor Turner and Edith L.B. Turner describe in their book, Image and Pilgrimage in Christian Culture, as “not only transition but also potentiality…” (3).

In pilgrimage, this potential is seen in the removal from ordinary life while on a spiritual quest for oneself. The outcome will look different for everyone, but the idea is for the pilgrims to learn about themselves and experience the natural world, therefore being able to complete a positive transition. The pilgrim is in between their starting point and destination while discovering themselves. 


Dr. Kip Redick discusses this in “The Connection between Liminal Places and Hospitality in Manifesting Pilgrim Values and Identity”, evident when he states that “in bracketing the natural attitude, liminality opens the sojourner to an alternative attitude…” (11). This statement demonstrates how while sojourning, one experiences something that is not usual to them and has the ability to complete a mental transformation.


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