Ciberespaço e turismo religioso: ritmanálise nos cotidianos das santas
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Universidade Federal de Goiás
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Nhá Chica, Santa Paulina and Santa Dulce dos Pobres’ sanctuaries, respectively in downtown
Baependi, state of Minas Gerais; Vigolo, in Nova Trento, state of Santa Catarina; and Bonfim,
in Salvador, state of Bahia; began to streamline their exchanges in the virtual space, mainly by
using online social media. These municipalities are very distinct as they belong to different
geographical regions, but they do have things in common due to their religious tourist
attractions. These religious attractions are linked to the lives and work of characters whose
historically constructed representations need to be promoted, disseminated, marketed and
consumed through the perspective of tourist activity. Nhá Chica, whose beatification occurred
in 2013, is in the process of being canonized; Santa Paulina, canonized since 2002, was the first
saint of Brazil; and Sister Dulce, the first saint actually born in Brazil, was the last one to be
canonized, in 2019. This demonstrates the attention the Catholic Church has devoted to Brazil,
a country which also concentrates the highest number of Catholics, even after the advancement
of Protestantism, especially the Neopentecostal evangelicals in Brazil, and Islamism, in global
terms. The sanctuaries and devotees’ social media pages that have those saints as a theme, in
the specific case of Facebook, promote, disseminate, schedule religious events, receive
donations, create virtual visits, that is, streamline the informational, symbolic and financial
exchanges permeated by the use of technologies. However, it is not known how such followers,
potential visitors of the tourist spaces, behave, interact, and change rhythms in these social
media, as well as to what extent such practices influence the tourist consumption of the cities
related to those saints. That leads to the question that guides this study: How are the social
media pages of Nhá Chica, Santa Paulina and Santa Dulce dos Pobres used, considering their
rhythmic alternations, and to what extent can these virtualities imply the consumption of tourist
activities of the religious type in Baependi, Nova Trento and Salvador, impacting their daily
lives and contributing to their polyrhythms?
To this end, a cyber-etnography based on participating observation was held on the Facebook
believers’ pages and the official pages of each sanctuary so as to capture the maximum relevant
information about behaviors in online communities. On another front, fieldwork was carried
out in different neighborhoods in times of routine movement and religious celebrations to find,
or not, the power of influence of social media. During that time, the exercise of rhythmanalysis
was present in the search to feel, identify and understand the rhythms of these daily lives.
Although this is a tiny timeframe, given the constant dimension and technological advances
that expand the possibilities of using cyberspace, this study indicated the remarkable presence
of the use of social media as dynamizing elements of the tourist activity in these destinations of
consolidated religious tourism in the country