Phenomenology of the pilgrimage of Imam Reza (AS); A case study in the winter of 2018
Phenomenology of the pilgrimage of Imam Reza (AS); A case study in the winter of 2018

Yahya Bouzarinejad; Mohammad Hossein Jamalzadeh; Ali Hatamzadeh

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 04 July 2023

https://doi.org/10.22034/farzv.2023.375928.1831

Abstract
  In the phenomenological approach, they experience the principle of social action in a creative way, and this lived experience emerges in the consciousness of others in an inter-subjective ...  Read More
A Study of Tourists' Narrative of the Experience of Attending Holy Places with a Phenomenological Approach
(Case Study: Razavi Shrine)
A Study of Tourists' Narrative of the Experience of Attending Holy Places with a Phenomenological Approach (Case Study: Razavi Shrine)

mostafa mahmoudi

Volume 10, Issue 37 , February 2022, , Pages 9-29

https://doi.org/10.22034/farzv.2021.265547.1605

Abstract
  This research is an attempt to reflect phenomenologically on the experiences of tourists who have entered the Razavi shrine with the intention of pilgrimage (religious tourists) or ...  Read More
Phenomenological Study of Steel Window of Mashhad al-Riḍā (as)
Phenomenological Study of Steel Window of Mashhad al-Riḍā (as)

karim khanmohammadi

Volume 9, Issue 35 , September 2021, , Pages 123-152

https://doi.org/10.22034/farzv.2021.133140

Abstract
  The pilgrimage city of Holy Mashhad, which has been called the religious and cultural capital of Iran, in addition to the shrine of Imam Riḍā (as) contains surrounding symbols that ...  Read More
Phenomenological Study of Female Pilgrimage
(Case Study: Imamzadeh Mohsen ibn Musa ibn Jaʿfar (as))
Phenomenological Study of Female Pilgrimage (Case Study: Imamzadeh Mohsen ibn Musa ibn Jaʿfar (as))

Karim Khan Mohammadi; Neda Ethna Asharan

Volume 8, Issue 32 , March 2021, , Pages 9-36

https://doi.org/10.22034/farzv.2021.125749

Abstract
  Half of human societies are made up of women, whereas in the past, women were excluded from social presence for traditional reasons and were considered as second degree; thus, feminine ...  Read More