The Tourist and the Pilgrim

Perhaps it is not the soul of the one whose photograph is taken that the camera steals, but rather the soul of the one who takes the picture.

What does it mean to be a tourist?

I thought about this often while spending two weeks out of the country being just that, a tourist. Sitting in front of one more cathedral, I think it was, having assaulted the structure with my camera and waiting to move on to the next target, I wondered whether someone had written something like a philosophy of tourism. I was certain someone must have; Alain de Botton surely. Every book I’ve ever imagined turned out already to have been written, often numerous times over.  I was sure this one was no exception. In any case, I didn’t plan to write that book. It was only a question occasioned by the nagging feeling that there was something fundamentally disordered about the experience we call tourism.

We know, of course, that there are many kinds of tourists ranging from the obnoxiously oblivious who seem to gleefully embrace the worst elements of the stereotype, to the ironically self-conscious who take pains to avoid appearing as a tourist at all. Most of us, as tourists that is, probably fall somewhere in between. For my part, I had little interest in pretending to be other than I was. And I certainly was not going to stop taking pictures in order to avoid appearing as a tourist.

In fact, I suffer from a severe case of camera eye. I would not claim to be an amateur photographer, as that might imply too high a level of photographic savvy, but I do enjoy taking pictures — many, many pictures. My wife tells me that she knows before I pull out the camera that I am about to do so because I get a certain look on my face that says, “That’s a good shot I’ve got to have.” I have no doubt that this is the case. I’ve frequently used the experience of walking around with a digital camera as an illustration of the way a technology can alter our experience merely by having it in hand. I use this example principally because I know its existential force all too well.

This photographic compulsion led me to think of being a tourist as a spectrum of activity defined by the degree to which the eye dominates the experience. On one end, seeing is all; the other is multi-sensory. Perhaps it is toward the visual end that most tourists naturally gravitate. You go to see sights. You are told that you must see this, that, and the other thing. You haven’t really been to X if you haven’t seen Y. And so on it goes. It is, more often than not, sight that first mediates our experience of any place. Further, if what there is to see is new or strange or majestic or stunning, we will continue to equate being there with seeing. And wanting to render the ephemeral visual experience durable we will seek to capture it with photographs burdened all the while by the realization that our pictures will always disappoint.

Clearly, then, I tend toward this end of spectrum. But even I recognize that seeing is not the only way to experience a place, or even the best way. And so I try to listen and to smell. From time to time I will touch a building to feel the place. And, of course, there is the tasting. The camera captures none of this, and so there is nothing to do but to put it away and sit and observe, with all the senses, this place and these people and the dynamic reality we call culture that emerges from their interaction. To “take it all in” as is it is sometimes put.

But even at this multi-sensory end of the spectrum, there is something that did not quite sit right with me. I kept thinking that in the end it is all still driven by the impulse to consume, precisely to take in and take away. It was as those tribesmen feared; with the camera I was hunting for the soul of the place, somehow to disassociate it from the material space and absorb it into myself. And even when I set the camera aside and sought to capture the full sensory experience, the impulse was still the same. How can it be otherwise? The essence of tourism is not merely spatial; it is also temporal. A tourist is not simply someone who goes to a different place, but someone whose experience of that place will be temporary. The experience of tourism is always defined by the nearness of its end. And so always conscious that I can be in this place only so much longer, I try to hard to take it in, which is to say, to consume it.

In this mode, there is little thought for what one might give to the place or how one might spend themselves in the place/for the place, or for the people of the place. There is little thought for how the place might transform the traveler either. The place is assimilated to the self and it becomes another vehicle of self-expression and self-fulfillment.

While thinking about what a book on the philosophy of tourism might encompass and what historical antecedents it might survey, it seemed obvious that it would have to reckon with pilgrimage. Pilgrimage had already been on my mind. In fact, pilgrimage is never far from my mind as a resonant metaphor for the religious life.  But the idea of pilgrimage was nearer than usual after having serendipitously watched The Way just two days before embarking on my own less symbolically fraught journey.

The Way is a 2010 film written and directed by Emilio Estevez and starring Martin Sheen. The father and son pair play a father and son. Early in the film, Sheen’s character travels to France to recover the body of his son played by Estevez. Upon arriving in France, he discovers that his son died while having just begun the famed pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela in northwestern Spain where the body of the Apostle James is reportedly buried. This discovery propels Sheen’s character to undertake the same journey with the ashes of his son in tow. Along the way he is joined by an unlikely set of three fellow pilgrims and the film tells the story of their transformation on the way to Santiago de Compostela.

It is not a profound film, but that is the worst one can say about it I think. It is an earnest film that manages to blend lovely scenery and charming characters in its gesture toward the profound. Along their premodern pilgrim way, the characters flash their postmodern sensibilities by engaging in a running debate about what constitutes authentic pilgrimage. Does making the trek on a bicycle negate the authenticity of the journey? Does recourse to credit cards? The modern hiking gear?

As the film makes plain, many now undertake the pilgrimage with very different motives than their medieval predecessors thus raising the question of authenticity. We can imagine that those most eager to define the authentic pilgrim experience might formulate their concern as an effort to protect the purity of the pilgrimage against the tourist ethos that animates so many that are now on the way. The zeal for purity stems from a desire to shield the experience from the encroachment of commodification and the dynamic of consumerism.

In the end, the film seems to suggest that whatever one’s motives, the road will have its own way. None of the pilgrims whose paths the film follows receive what they expected or desired, but each is transformed. We might say that it is they who have been consumed by the journey. Thinking about the film, it occurred to me that the better, more interesting spectrum placed tourism on one end and pilgrimage on the other.

The way of the tourist is to consume; the way of the pilgrim is to be consumed. To the tourist the journey is a means. The pilgrim understands that it is both a means and an end in itself. The tourist and the pilgrim experience time differently. For the former, time is the foe that gives consumption its urgency. For the latter, time is a gift in which the possibility of the journey is actualized. Or better, for the pilgrim time is already surrendered to the journey that, sooner or later, will come to its end. The tourist bends the place to the shape of the self. The pilgrim is bent to shape of the journey.

Finally, it seemed to me that this was all about more than the literal trips we take for we are all, in a different sense, on the way. In our time of abandonment, home for most must now be a mythic place touched only by hope. We are untethered, unencumbered, uprooted. Under these conditions we have only to decide whether we are on the way as tourists or as pilgrims.

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The opposition of consuming to being consumed is borrowed from William Cavanaugh. Hope in Time of Abandonment is the title of a book by Jacques Ellul.

13 thoughts on “The Tourist and the Pilgrim

  1. love this post! the camera eye is a topic dear to me, of course.

    really dig the point that the logic of the camera mechanism as the dominant form of tourist documentation has taught us to equate ‘being there’ with seeing, as you say. however, i’d like to push you a bit to think about photography as more than just sight. you say that is all photographs can be, but i think that sounds a bit like old photography-theory that viewed the photograph as only an objective capturing of reality. this notion came to be supplanted by the understanding that the photograph is part objectivity and part subjectivity. as susan sontag put it, photographers are always at once poets and scribes, part creative, part objective documentation. remembering this, we should view the photograph as not just the objective capturing of light, but also take into account the creative subjectivity you put into each photo you took. each photo is not just what you see in the image, but what feelings it causes in the viewer; the meaning packed into the photograph; etc.

    an example, i think of this photo i took of a musician: http://www.thevinyldistrict.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/zolajesus_guggenheimnyc_9may2012-14-of-110.gif that is not really what that moment *looked* like. instead, the image was captured and edited to try to convey what that moment *felt* like. meaning and feeling are always part of a photograph. a photo of food you ate can conjure the taste back into your mind. i guess this is a long way to say that a photograph is never just “seeing.”

    1. Nathan, I would not disagree. Photographs certainly do capture something more than that fact of the object or scene, and they always carry something of the subjectivity of the photographer. No argument here. I suppose that in this post I was trying to capture something more existential. No particular theory was intended, only a description of what the experience felt like. I did at one point think about adding a line about the texture of surfaces that might evoke the memory of touch, but ultimately dropped it. I would still maintain, though, that there is a great chasm fixed between the photograph and the experience that can be bridged neither by memory, which points to nothing as much as its own incompleteness, nor its prosthetics.

      1. The last sentence of your comment echoes this from your post: “And wanting to render the ephemeral visual experience durable we will seek to capture it with photographs burdened all the while by the realization that our pictures will always disappoint.”

        This really does not have to be the experience of photogaphy, When I take my pictures, I expect the final product will be a surprise, something that the process reveals just as any process reveals in the change it represents.

        Maybe something like “I was in the place and took this photograph. See? I was in the place and learned this song, LIsten.”

        Every moment, every experience is ephemeral and incomplete. There is a great chasm from one moment to the next.

        http://atomicgeography.com/2012/04/28/spring-light/

        1. I think you’re right in saying that this does not have to be the experience of photography. Thinking more about this post throughout the day, it occurred to me, for example, that the photograph can be understood not only as a gesture of consumption, but also one of creation. (Or prosumption as Nathan might put it.) I particularly liked your expectation of surprise from the photographs you take. Perhaps I needed to make it clearer in the post that I wasn’t going for a theory of photography, in a sense photography was incidental to what I was trying to get at in the post. As I described it, it was a symptom of sort or a particular frame of mind which the type of the tourist captures to some degree.

  2. de Botton has written about tourism, one other interesting source is Daniel Kalder’s “Lost Cosmonauts”, about his travels in Russia and which includes an “anti tourist manifesto” (which I am pretty sure is on Kalder’s site.

    One of the characters in Elaine Dundy’s “The Dud Avocado” gives, in the novel’s opening pages, a very entertaining classification of post war Americans in Paris

    Ah, here’s the Daniel Kalder manifesto:
    http://www.danielkalder.com/antitourism.html

    And to, with some grandiosity, insert myself into proceedings, a few years back I reviewed The lonely planet guide to “experimental travel” in somewhat jaundiced terms :http://www.socialaffairsunit.org.uk/blog/archives/000569.php

  3. I, too, suffer from a case of camera eye, which became more severe after getting an iPhone 4 (the camera on this phone is great, so how can I *not* snap quick pics everywhere I go?).

    “The camera captures none of this” — part of me agrees with this. I’ve noticed my older film photographs have a multi-sensory quality; from looking at them, I can recount smells and textures in particular. But the photos I take these days aren’t as sensory — I’m not sure why, but perhaps one reason is because I take so many versions of the same shot (in a way “diluting” that particular moment in time). And then, when I sift through these photos to select the best take among them, I’ve moved away from recalling that full sensory experience, instead focused on image-editing the moment so it’s shareable with others.

    I like what you say about absorbing a place into yourself — to consume it, to use it as a vehicle for self-expression and self-fulfillment. I actually started my blog in 2009 as a travel blog and began to network with (and read) other travel bloggers/writers, but I have never really enjoyed the writing within this niche/industry — some people seemed to write about a place without acknowledging how they’ve used/consumed it for oftentimes selfish reasons, and your thoughts here remind me of the type of writing I *do* like to read when it comes to topics like place, tourism, and pilgrimage.

    And finally, I love this line: “The tourist bends the place to the shape of the self.” It reminds me of this quote from Pico Iyer on one of his recent pieces on Oxford: “Places don’t change easily inside our heads. We rarely allow them to.” I think of my love affair with Montreal in particular. How I dream about it, think about the summers I lived there, know it to be a certain way, and yet I have not visited in 6 years. Our relationships to places really are fascinating.

    Sorry this comment goes all over the place, but your post brought up a number of different things for me, and I may write about it in time on my blog. Thanks!

    1. That’s interesting that you distinguish the between film and digital photographs with regard to their multi-sensory quality. Whenever I’ve thought about the difference I’ve mostly been impressed with the discipline the limits of a roll (or even several rolls) of film imposes, a discipline that yields to sheer wantonness with digital cameras. But this corresponds somewhat to your hypothesis about why digital loses this quality, and that rings true to my experience as well.

      It’s funny that you mention Iyer too, I’ve only read a few of his pieces over the years, but I’ve always been struck by his notion of the global soul. Perhaps something I should’ve revisited before writing this post. In truth, I feel this post to be something of a seed for something a bit more developed. The contrast pilgrim/tourist struck me something akin to Isaiah Berlin’s use of the hedgehog and the fox; a typology of sorts for different modes of being.

      In any case, I look forward to whatever you end up writing on the topic!

  4. I just stumbled on this post as I was mulling over some thoughts about food, and the difference in the ways pilgrims and tourists consume food. I wrote a book about pilgrimage to Israel/Palestine, as a Christian pastor/believer who had ideas/feelings to wrestle down. Now I apply the lens of pilgrimage to other trips and experiences.

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