Religious pilgrimages to the high Andes take place periodically in the Humahuaca region of northern Argentina. Although these processions are formally dedicated to the Virgin and saints of Catholicism, they take place in a mountain landscape that has been traditionally sacred in Andean religiosity. This paper describes the high altitude pilgrimage to Punta Corral from an ethnographic and ethnoarchaeological perspective, focusing in the use of the mountain scenery in the context of the diverse rituals that configure this particular collective religious experience. The Punta Corral pilgrimage is a syncrethic ceremony which combines elements of popular catholicism in Latinoamerica with traditional Andean rituals of probable pre-hispanic origin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Published
2011
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.