Healing ourselves, healing nature: Holistic thermalism in Spain as a mutually enriching practice?
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Holistic thermalism Wellbeing Therapheutic landscapes Hot springs Spain
Date
2025-02-15Referencia bibliográfica
Pinos-Navarrete, A., & Toro-Sánchez, F. J. (2025). “Healing ourselves, healing nature”: Holistic thermalism in Spain as a mutually enriching practice?. Journal of Outdoor Recreation and Tourism, 49, 100860. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jort.2025.100860
Patrocinador
MICIU/AEI/10.13039/5011000111033 COVID era PID2021-128699NB-I00; FEDER, EURésumé
Under more sustainable alternatives of tourism, a variety of proposals are encompassed, revolving around
resilient and immersive leisure practices in nature. In this context, holistic thermalism stands out as a paradigmatic
case of "being-well in nature," relying on the on-site utilization of mineral medicinal waters to achieve
an experience that transcends mere recreation, evolving into spiritual and tentacular motivations intertwined
with the web of life. Indeed, this is the most significant of its defining qualities, linking thermalism to its most
original and ancestral conception. The user must necessarily journey to the location where the health-giving
waters reside, engage with their cyclical and ecosystemic components, and their sojourn requires a certain degree
of sociability and tranquility, as sensory factors and the environment contribute to creating a therapeutic
and healing landscape crucial to thermalism. Simultaneously, the setting where the thermal cure takes place
must meet a series of logistical and technical requirements to ensure the success of the treatment, such as
providing complementary accommodation, dining services, and other infrastructure dedicated to this slow
tourism: paths and trails for strolling through environments of great aesthetic and environmental appeal. In
Spain, and given the aforementioned requisites, thermal tourism is typically carried out in areas of high
ecological value, within rural areas exposed to depopulation issues and the abandonment of resilient agricultural
and livestock practices with the environment. In this sense, the main aim of the research is to reflect on how the
use of mineral-medicinal water in thermal places in Spain is linked to the space, natural resources, heritage,
population, and landscape, forming a prominent part of the concept of thermalism. At the same time, this
represents an opportunity for the conservation of areas of high ecological value.