Dark Tourism and Place Identity/ - 2013.

Chapter 1|10 pages
Exploring dark tourism and place identity

Part |1 pages

PART I Visitor motivation
Chapter 2|15 pages
The Pe`re-Lachaise Cemetery: between dark tourism and heterotopic consumption

Chapter 3|18 pages
African Americans at sites of darkness: roots-seeking, diasporic identities and place making

Chapter 4|14 pages
Place identity or place identities: the Memorial to the Victims of the Nanjing Massacre, China

Chapter 5|19 pages
The contribution of dark tourism to place identity in Northern Ireland

Chapter 6|15 pages
Dark tourism, heterotopias and post-apocalyptic places: the case of Chernobyl

Part |1 pages

PART II Destination management
Chapter 7|18 pages
Pagan tourism and the management of ancient sites in Cornwall

Chapter 8|14 pages
Soviet tourism in the Baltic states: remembrance versus nostalgia – just different shades of dark?

Chapter 9|13 pages
Turning the negative around: the case of Taupo, New Zealand

Chapter 10|14 pages
Commemorating and commodifying the Rwandan genocide: memorial sites in a politically difficult context

Chapter 11|11 pages
Dark tourism and place identity in French Guiana

Chapter 12|19 pages
Place identities in the Normandy landscape of war: touring the Canadian sites of memory

Part |1 pages

PART III Place interpretation
Chapter 13|13 pages
Holocaust tourism in a post-Holocaust Europe: Anne Frank and Auschwitz

Chapter 14|15 pages
Dark detours: celebrity car crash deaths and trajectories of place

Chapter 15|19 pages
Marvellous, murderous and macabre Melbourne: taking a walk on the dark side

Chapter 16|12 pages
War and ideological conflict: prisoner of war camps as a tourist experience in South Korea

Chapter 17|16 pages
Dark tourism in the Top End: commemorating the bombing of Darwin

Chapter 18|12 pages
Darkness beyond memory: the battlefields at Culloden and Little Bighorn

Chapter 19|7 pages
Beyond the dark side: research directions for dark tourism


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