ABSTRACT

Dark Tourism, as well as other terms such as Thanatourism and Grief Tourism, has been much discussed in the past two decades. This volume provides a comprehensive exploration of the subject from the point of view of both practice - how Dark Tourism is performed, what practical and physical considerations exist on site - and interpretation - how Dark Tourism is understood, including issues pertaining to ethics, community involvement and motivation. It showcases a wide range of examples, drawing on the expertise of academics with management and consultancy experience, as well as those from within the social sciences and humanities.  Contributors discuss the historical development of Dark Tourism, including its earlier incarnations across Europe, but they also consider its future as a strand within academic discourse, as well as its role within tourism development. Case studies include holocaust sites in Germany, as well as analysis of the legacy of war in places such as the Channel Islands and Malta. Ethical and myriad marketing considerations are also discussed in relation to Ireland, Brazil, Rwanda, Romania, U.K., Nepal and Bosnia-Herzegovina.

This book covers issues that are of interest to students and staff across a spectrum of disciplines, from management to the arts and humanities, including conservation and heritage, site management, marketing and community participation.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

chapter |14 pages

The long shadow

Marketing Dachau

chapter |15 pages

Prison tourism

Exploring the spectacle of punishment in the UK

chapter |14 pages

Patrimony, engineered remembrance and ancestral vampires

Appraising thanatouristic resources in Ireland and Sicily

chapter |14 pages

Death camp tourism

Interpretation and management

chapter |13 pages

Guilty landscapes and the selective reconstruction of the past

Dedham Vale and the murder in the Red Barn

chapter |12 pages

A culturally constructed darkness

Dark legacies and dark heritage in the Channel Islands

chapter |13 pages

A light in dark places?

Analysing the impact of dark tourism experiences on everyday life

chapter |13 pages

The undead and dark tourism

Dracula tourism in Romania

chapter |13 pages

Genocide tourism in Rwanda

Contesting the concept of the ‘dark tourist'

chapter |13 pages

Everyday darkness and catastrophic events 1

Riding Nepal's buses through peace, war, and an earthquake

chapter |14 pages

From living memory to social history

Commemoration and interpretation of a contemporary dark event

chapter |18 pages

Dark tourism in the brightest of cities

Rio de Janeiro and the favela tour