Dark Tourism and Crime

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A01=Derek Dalton
Architect Michael Arad
Arnold De Simine
atrocity site interpretation
Author_Derek Dalton
Broad Arrow
Bruny Island
Category=JKV
Category=KNP
Centre De La
Clandestine Detention Centre
Constitutive Criminology
Convict Past
criminological tourism
Dark Tourism
Dark Tourism Experience
Dark Tourism Site
De La Memoria
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethnographic fieldwork
genocide remembrance
Joe Strummer
memorial site studies
Museo De La Memoria
Parque De La Memoria
Peace Park
Penal Tourism
Phnom Penh
Reflecting Absence
Separate Prison
Strawberry Fields
Survivor Tree
Tasman Peninsula
trauma heritage research
Tuol Sleng
visitor experience at crime locations
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415643511
  • Weight: 476g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Nov 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Dark tourism has become widespread and diverse. It has passed into popular culture vernacular, deployed in guide books as a short hand descriptor for sites that are associated with death, suffering and trauma. However, whilst books have been devoted to dark tourism as a general topic no single text has sought to explore dark tourism in spaces where crime - mass murder, genocide, State sanctioned torture and violence - has occurred as an organising theme.

Dark Tourism and Crime explores the socio-cultural contours of this unique type of tourism and explains why spaces/places where crime has occurred fascinate and attract tourists. The book is marked by an ethics of respect for the suffering a place has experienced and an imperative to learn something tangible about the history and legacy of that suffering. Based on empirical ethnographic research it takes the reader from the remnants of Auschwitz concentration camp to the tranquil Australian island of Tasmania to explore precisely what things a dark tourist might encounter - architecture, art installations, gardens, memorials, physical traces of crime - and how these things invoke and evoke past crimes.

This volume furthers understanding of dark tourism and will be of interest to students, researchers and academics of criminology, tourism and cultural studies.

Derek Dalton is an Associate Professor in Criminal Justice at Flinders University Law School. His research interests cluster around the conflation of homosexuality and criminality. In 2012 he co-edited ‘Policing Sex’ (Routledge) with Paul Johnson. More recently, a project exploring tourism in sites where major crime has occurred (e.g. Auschwitz, the ‘Killing Fields’ of Cambodia, Port Arthur in Tasmania etcetera) has evolved over eight years of research.  

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