Ian Reader is Professor of Religious Studies at Lancaster University. He was previously Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Manchester, and has worked at academic institutions in Japan, the UK, Denmark and Hawaii. His main research interests are on pilgrimage and on religion in the modern world.
'In his inimitable style, Ian Reader, the most prominent and highly respected scholar of contemporary Japanese religion writing today, draws upon Japan's vibrant traditions of pilgrimage to provide an important corrective to much scholarship on pilgrimage throughout the world that, until now, has focused primarily on the spirituality or sacredness of religious travel. Pilgrimage in the Marketplace is sure to shift the terms of discussion, helping readers understand the complex position of pilgrimage in our contemporary, consumer-oriented world.' - Sarah Thal, University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA 'This is a boldly written book which challenges assumptions about why pilgrimage seems so popular in the contemporary world.' - Simon Coleman, University of Toronto, Canada [Reader] embeds [his] detailed knowledge...within a wider experience and study of pilgrimages the world over...Summing up: Recommended -P.S. Spalding, Illinois College, USA in CHOICE Reader's attempts to deconstruct the binary opposition between the sacred and the profane are exemplary. The examples he provides throughout the book urge us to think beyond the sacred/profane divide, and to analyze in details the intricate relationships between religion, economy, media, and tourism... Reader's insights and rich ethnographical data are major contributions to our understanding of the fields of pilgrimage studies and religious studies as a whole. - Francois Thibeault, Universite du Quebec a Montreal, Canada This is a key work not only to learn something about contemporary pilgrimage, but also for pondering the larger theoretical issue of religion and secularization. It also highlights the importance theoretically of taking a comparative perspective, something that is rarely done as well as this volume in today's scholarship. - Mark MacWilliams, Religious Studies Review