Critical Theories in Dark Tourism
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Edited by:
Nitasha Sharma
, Annaclaudia Martini and Dallen J. Timothy
About this book
This book facilitates a critical investigation of gaps in theorizing and framing dark tourism by navigating through some onto-epistemological issues, theoretical entanglements, future possibilities, and the application of critical theoretical perspectives related to affect and emotions, human-animal studies, postcolonialism, feminism, trauma studies, posthumanism, power and identity. In doing so, it advances the need to connect critical theory, pragmatism and contemporary issues of social and global relevance.
"Given the growing body of critical research within tourism studies, dark tourism has somewhat lagged behind. For example, critical tourism researchers have been examining postcolonialism for two decades, but dark tourism research has only sporadically engaged with this topic. Similarly, the issue of gender has been curiously neglected within dark tourism. In addition, dark tourism research has tended to shy away from the ‘big’ challenges facing contemporary societies. Through its engagement with a range of critical theories, this volume not only addresses gaps in the existing dark tourism literature but also moves the debate forward in exciting new directions. This volume is well-placed to demonstrate to other disciplines and fields that dark tourism research can be critical, theoretically grounded, and transformative." – Duncan Light
- examines the engagement of dark tourism with critical theory
- includes geographical approaches, globally dispersed topics and contemporary issues
- extends the analytical lens of the field to a more critical, reflexive and inclusive approach
Author / Editor information
Annaclaudia Martini is an Assistant Professor in Human Geography at the University of Bologna, Italy. Her academic interests include geographies of affect, critical geographies, post-disaster tourism and heritage studies, and qualitative and creative methodologies. She works with disaster-hit communities in the Tohoku region of Japan, looking at the intersections of post-disaster tourism, affects, and community resilience.
Dallen J. Timothy is Professor of Community Resources and Development, and Senior Sustainability Scientist at Arizona State University, USA. He also holds visiting professorships in Mexico, China, Spain, and South Africa. His current tourism research in Africa, Asia, North America, Europe and the Pacific islands includes perspectives on geopolitics and globalization, international borders, pilgrimage, heritage management, retail consumption, human mobility, and sense of place.
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Acknowledgements
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Contents
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Foreword
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1 Dark tourism: The need for a critical approach
5 - Part I: Dark tourism, affect and emotions
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2 Atmospheric instability in dark tourism: Spatial construction of conflicting affective atmospheres at the Titanic Museum & Attraction, Pigeon Forge, Tennessee (USA)
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3 Understanding the emotions of visitors to Chernobyl
53 - Part II: Dark tourism and critical animal studies
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4 Animals as dark tourism attractions: A prototype
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5 Meet, greet and eat: Farmed animals as dark tourism attractions
89 - Part III: Dark tourism and critical memory studies
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6 Trading paradise for Palestine: Dark tourism to refugee camps in the West Bank
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7 The scope of dark tourism-scapes: Exclusion zones and their creative boundedness from Chornobyl to Montserrat
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8 Exploring the intersections between dark tourism and Arctic traumascapes in the Anthropocene: The case of Finnish Lapland
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9 “Despicable and disgusting”: Emotional labor, and the fear of dark tourism
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10 Welcome to Revachol: Disco Elysium as virtual dark tourism
181 - Part IV: Dark tourism, power and identity
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11 Sites of (dark) consciences: Investigating dark tourism cosmologies in a postcolonial landscape
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12 Towards a postcolonial museum? Experiencing legacies of colonialism in dark tourism museum exhibits
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13 Exhibiting power: Dark tourism and crime in the police museum
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14 Representations in UK witches tours: Walking over the roots of misogyny
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15 Critical theories in dark tourism: Over the years and beyond
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List of contributors
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List of figures
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Index
293
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