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- Dark tourism - Wikipedia
- Home - Dark Tourism - the guide to dark travel destinations …
- What is dark tourism and why is it so popular? - Tourism Teacher
- Dark Tourism: Why People Travel to Sites of Death and Tragedy
- Dark tourism: when tragedy meets tourism - National Geographic
- What Is Dark Tourism? Check Out Top 10 Destinations
- From true crimes to terror: When is ‘dark tourism’ too dark?
- The Home of Dark Tourism – Dark Tourists
- Everything about Dark Tourism | Concept, Types, Examples
- What Is Dark Tourism?
dark tourism
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Dark tourism (also thanatourism, black tourism, morbid tourism, or grief tourism) has been defined as tourism involving travel to places historically associated with death and tragedy. More recently, it was suggested that the concept should also include reasons tourists visit that site, since the site's attributes alone may not make a visitor a "dark tourist". The main attraction to dark locations is their historical value rather than their associations with death and suffering. Holocaust tourism contains aspects of both dark tourism and heritage tourism.
Field of study
While there is a long tradition of people visiting recent and ancient settings of death, such as travel to gladiator games in the Roman colosseum, attending public executions by decapitation, and visiting the catacombs, this practice has been studied academically only relatively recently.
Travel writers were the first to describe their tourism to deadly places. P. J. O'Rourke called his travel to Warsaw, Managua, and Belfast in 1988 'holidays in hell', or Chris Rojek talking about 'black-spot' tourism in 1993 or the 'milking the macabre'.
Academic attention to the subject originated in Glasgow, Scotland: The term 'dark tourism' was coined in 1996 by Lennon and Foley, two faculty members of the Department of Hospitality, Tourism & Leisure Management at Glasgow Caledonian University, and the term 'thanatourism' was first mentioned by A. V. Seaton in 1996, then Professor of Tourism Marketing at the University of Strathclyde.
As of 2014, there have been many studies on definitions, labels, and subcategorizations, such as Holocaust tourism and slavery-heritage tourism, and the term continues to be molded outside academia by authors of travel literature. There is very little empirical research on the perspective of the dark tourist.
Dark tourism has been formally studied from three main perspectives by a variety of different disciplines:
= Hospitality and tourism
=Scholars in this interdisciplinary field have examined many different aspects. Lennon and Foley expanded their original idea in their first book, deploring that "tact and taste do not prevail over economic considerations" and that the "blame for transgressions cannot lie solely on the shoulders of the proprietors, but also upon those of the tourists, for without their demand there would be no need to supply."
Whether a tourist attraction is educational or exploitative is defined by both its operators and its visitors. Tourism operators motivated by greed can "milk the macabre" or reexamine tragedies for a learning experience. Tourists consuming dark tourism products may desecrate a place and case studies are needed to probe who gains and loses. Chris Hedges criticized the "Alcatraz narrative as presented by the National Park Service" as "whitewashing", because it "ignores the savagery and injustice of America's system of mass incarceration". By omitting challenging details, the park service furthers a "Disneyfication", per Hedges.
Example destinations
Destinations of dark tourism include castles and battlefields such as Culloden in Scotland and Bran Castle and Poienari Castle in Romania; former prisons such as Beaumaris Prison in Anglesey, Wales and the Jack the Ripper exhibition in the London Dungeon; sites of natural disasters or man made disasters, such as Hiroshima Peace Memorial Park in Japan, Chernobyl in Ukraine and the commercial activity at Ground Zero in New York one year after September 11, 2001. It also includes sites of human atrocities, murders, and genocide, such as the Auschwitz concentration camp in Poland, the Nanjing Massacre Memorial Hall in China, the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum in Cambodia; the sites of the Jeju Uprising in South Korea and the Spirit Lake Internment Camp Centre near La Ferme, Quebec as an example of Canada's internment operations of 1914–1920.
After the Broken Arrow killings, the home of the Bever family became a center for dark tourism by ghost hunters, urban legend seekers, teenagers, trespassers and vandals.
In Bali, "death and funeral rites have become commodified for tourism... where enterprising businesses begin arranging tourist vans and sell tickets as soon as they hear someone is dying." In the U.S., visitors can tour the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., "with an identity card which matches their age and gender with that of a name and photo of a real holocaust victim. Against a backdrop of video interpretation portraying killing squads in action, the pseudo-Holocaust victim enters a personal ID into monitors as they wander around the attraction to discover how their real-life counterpart is faring." In Colombia, places associated with Pablo Escobar, the drug lord from the Medellín Cartel, became hotspots for dark tourism through Escobar-themed tours. In Medellín, visitors frequent Roberto Escobar's private museum of his infamous brother, the house where he was killed, and La Catedral, Escobar's prison. Another famous place is the Hacienda Nápoles estate located between Bogotá and Medellín, near Puerto Triunfo.
See also
Dark Tourist (television series)
Disaster tourism
Slum tourism
War tourism
References
Further reading
Doughty, Caitlin (2017). From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 978-0393249897. OCLC 971348404.
Seraphin, Hugues. Terrorism and tourism in France: the limitations of dark tourism Worldwide Hospitality and Tourism Themes 9.2 (2017): 187-195.
External links
"What is dark tourism?", The Guardian special feature
Chernobyl: Unlikely Tourist Spot Archived 2010-09-27 at the Wayback Machine - slideshow by Life magazine
Kata Kunci Pencarian: dark tourism
dark tourism
Daftar Isi
Dark tourism - Wikipedia
Dark tourism (also thanatourism, black tourism, morbid tourism, or grief tourism) has been defined as tourism involving travel to places historically associated with death and tragedy. [1]
Home - Dark Tourism - the guide to dark travel destinations …
Covering over a thousand individual dark places in 116 different countries. This site aims to promote (and also "rehabilitate") dark tourism (DT). There has been some negative reporting in the media about DT, often on the basis of an ill understood concept of DT and/or together with bad examples that are not really representative of dark tourism.
What is dark tourism and why is it so popular? - Tourism Teacher
May 20, 2024 · Dark tourism, also known as black tourism, thanatourism or grief tourism, is tourism that is associated with death or tragedy. The act of dark tourism is somewhat controversial, with some viewing it as an act of respect and others as unethical practice.
Dark Tourism: Why People Travel to Sites of Death and Tragedy
Oct 13, 2022 · Droves of tourists frequent concentration camps, sites of famous battles or even places where mass atrocities occurred. What draws us to this dark tourism?
Dark tourism: when tragedy meets tourism - National Geographic
Apr 8, 2019 · The likes of Auschwitz, Ground Zero and Chernobyl are seeing increasing numbers of visitors, sparking the term 'dark tourism'. But is it voyeuristic or educational?
What Is Dark Tourism? Check Out Top 10 Destinations
Feb 17, 2025 · Notable Dark Tourism Destinations. For travellers intrigued by history’s darker chapters, the following destinations offer unique and thought-provoking experiences: Chernobyl, Ukraine The catastrophic nuclear disaster of 1986 turned …
From true crimes to terror: When is ‘dark tourism’ too dark?
Dec 14, 2024 · Dark tourism (also known as memorial tourism, or thanatourism, from the Greek “Thanatos” meaning death, or more derogatorily as morbid tourism, or grief tourism) comes in various shades.
The Home of Dark Tourism – Dark Tourists
Oct 19, 2020 · Our aim is to highlight some of the world’s most significant dark tourism travel destinations. From assassinations and murder sites to locations of untold man-made devastation. We explore the battle relics of world wars, the remnants of corrupt regimes, and haunting places of genocide. What is Dark Tourism?
Everything about Dark Tourism | Concept, Types, Examples
May 24, 2021 · What is dark tourism? Dark Tourism, in simpler terms, means ‘atmospheric tourism,’ where people can see the beauty in the sadness of a place. It is also known as grief tourism and black tourism. This form of travel goes beyond simply visiting the site of …
What Is Dark Tourism?
Apr 22, 2024 · Dark tourism, also known as thanatourism or grief tourism, delves into the darker chapters of human history and heritage. It encompasses travel to destinations associated with death, disaster, and suffering.