IMAGES

  1. What is Dark Tourism? And What Are the Pros and Cons?

    cons of dark tourism

  2. What is Dark Tourism?

    cons of dark tourism

  3. 10 Dark Tourism Sites to Explore Around the World

    cons of dark tourism

  4. The Rise of DARK Tourism

    cons of dark tourism

  5. What is Dark Tourism? And What Are the Pros and Cons?

    cons of dark tourism

  6. The Importance of Dark Tourism: The Black/ Thanatourism Tourism Industry Explained

    cons of dark tourism

VIDEO

  1. What is Dark Tourism?

  2. The Importance of Dark Tourism: The Black/ Thanatourism Tourism Industry Explained

  3. Dark Tourism: Definition and examples

  4. The Best Creepiest Places that Dark Tourists Love

  5. 5 Most Disturbing & Dark Tourist Destinations

  6. The Rise of DARK Tourism

COMMENTS

  1. What is Dark Tourism? And What Are the Pros and Cons?

    While visiting places of death or disaster might sound like a gruesome addition to your travel itinerary, so-called dark tourism can have important benefits for you and the communities nearby. Visiting sites of inhumanity can be a deeply moving and emotional experience, but while discovering what took place might make us uneasy, remembering ...

  2. Dark Tourism Ethics and Criticisms

    8. Desecration of the Site. Some dark tourism critics argue that welcoming millions of visitors and building tourism infrastructure like gift shops, restaurants, coffee shops, hotels, restrooms, etc. desecrates the sites of human suffering and death. This disrespects the victims of disaster or tragedy.

  3. Dark Tourism: Destinations of Death, Tragedy and the Macabre

    170. The Aokigahara forest in Japan, known as the suicide forest, is a dark tourism destination. Ko Sasaki for The New York Times. By Maria Cramer. Oct. 28, 2022. North Korea. East Timor. Nagorno ...

  4. Dark Tourism: Why People Travel to Sites of Death and Tragedy

    The concept of dark tourism is culturally nuanced and means different things to different people. It can mediate our sense of mortality through the fatality of others where the dead act as warnings from the history of our own fights, follies, and misfortunes, says Stone. In short, a fascination with death in itself might not be the primary ...

  5. Dark tourism can be voyeuristic and exploitative

    Published: September 20, 2017 8:11am EDT. Dark tourism is in vogue. It involves travel to sites associated with death, suffering and the seemingly macabre. Trips to former concentrations camps ...

  6. It may be macabre, but dark tourism helps us learn from the worst of

    Published: June 15, 2016 8:52am EDT. Dark tourism has become a much more well-covered pasttime in recent years, in which a macabre fascination lead tourists to travel to various places not served ...

  7. Dark tourism, explained: Why visitors flock to sites of tragedy

    Dark tourism refers to visiting places where some of the darkest events of human history have unfolded. That can include genocide, assassination, incarceration, ethnic cleansing, war or disaster ...

  8. Dark tourism and affect: framing places of death and disaster

    The 'darkness' in dark tourism. The locution 'dark tourism' has undergone critical scrutiny, as detractors claim that it entails negative cultural connotations (Dunnett, Citation 2014; Edensor, Citation 2013), and prefer definitions perceived as more neutral, such as thanatourism.Regardless of the word used to describe visits to places related to death, negativity may be implied ...

  9. What is dark tourism and why is it controversial?

    Dark tourism (also know as 'black' or 'grief' tourism) is the name given to visiting any kind of place that owes its notoriety to death, disaster or atrocity. It could be the site of a ...

  10. Dark Tourism

    Dark tourism is an academic label from the imagination of scholars who wish to shine a critical light on heritage that hurts. As such, "ghosts" of the significant Other dead who haunt our collective conscience have been increasingly commodified through memorials, museums, and visitor attractions - and, consequently, the dead now occupy touristic landscapes.

  11. Is 'Dark Tourism' OK?

    Of course, nearly every destination in the world is "dark" in some way. Even places we describe as "to die for" often have been scenes of natural disaster, violence, and displacement ...

  12. Young tourists' experiences at dark tourism sites: Towards a conceptual

    While dark tourism aimed at adults reminds them of past tragic fights, faults and follies, thousands of children and youth also consume inherent memorial messages at dark tourism sites. This paper addresses these unnoticed childhood encounters, about which scholarly discourse remains conspicuously silent.

  13. Does Dark Tourism Exploit Tragedy for Profit?

    Instead of "dark tourism," which he finds "sensational and emotionally laden," Johnston prefers the term "thanatourism," or travel designed to encounter death. Whatever it's called, it seems to be growing in popularity. Places of atrocity and disaster—Auschwitz-Birkenau, Nagasaki and Hiroshima, Reactor 4 in Chernobyl—are hot.

  14. Dark Tourism

    Other notable definitions of dark tourism include the act of travel to sites associated with death, suffering and the seemingly macabre (Stone, 2006), and as visitations to places where tragedies ...

  15. Dark Tourists: Profile, Practices, Motivations and Wellbeing

    2.1. Dark Tourists and Their Motivation to Dark Tourism Consumption. Stone's (2006) idea of dark tourism goes far beyond related attractions. From this standpoint, diverse well-visited tourist sites may become places of dark tourism due to their history linked with death—e.g., suicides in the Eiffel Tower, tombs in the pyramids of Egypt, the Valley of the Kings, and the Taj Mahal, funeral ...

  16. A Bibliometric Analysis and Systematic Review of Dark Tourism: Trends

    The interest of academia in studying dark tourism is an axis that has been increasing in recent years (Lv et al. 2022b).In recent decades, many empirical studies in the field of tourism have shown a great interest in the study of tourist destinations whose cultural heritage is related to the dark events of the past (Magee and Gilmore 2015; Sun and Lv 2021).

  17. Exploring The Dark Side: The Popularity Of Dark Tourism

    Dark tourism has been around for centuries, but the term "dark tourism" was only coined in the 1990s. Some of the most popular dark tourism destinations include Auschwitz, Ground Zero, and the Killing Fields in Cambodia. Dark tourism can be educational and help people understand and appreciate history.

  18. How 'dark tourism' can pass on the lessons of past tragedies

    Listen to the article. 'Dark tourism' is a new kind of travel experience seeking to impart lessons from past tragedies. Tours in Japan's Tohoku region reflect on the devastation and recovery from the 2011 earthquake. Creating unique social and cultural value for the affected region, dark tourism has economic benefits too.

  19. The Ethics of Dark Tourism

    The Ethics of Dark Tourism. By Rachel Robison-Greene. 7 Apr 2021. "Cecil Hotel" by eileenmak is licensed under CC BY 2.0 (via Flickr) In February 2020, Netflix released a four-part docuseries called Crime Scene: The Vanishing at the Cecil Hotel. The series focuses on the death of Elisa Lam, but along the way it tells the story of the building.

  20. Dark tourism, the holocaust, and well-being: A systematic review

    2.2. Eligibility criteria. This systematic review adheres to the PRISMA guidelines [], consisting of the mapping, analysis, and synthesis of the existing literature on Holocaust-related dark tourism and well-being.The criteria for the literature selection included articles in peer-reviewed academic journals, books, and book chapters written in English, published from 1985 to February 2022.

  21. Embracing 'virtual dark tourism' could help heritage sites at risk of

    Dark tourism is considered a subset of heritage tourism, because many dark tourism sites are also heritage sites. For example, Leap Castle in Ireland is a heritage site with history dating back to ...

  22. What's Dark Tourism? And Why Is It So Popular?

    In simple terms, dark tourism is the opposite of "traditional" tourism. Instead of visiting inspiring, classic sites, travelers take great care to visit places where some of the darkest events in human history took place. This includes anything from natural disasters to war and assassination.

  23. What is Dark Tourism and Why It's Becoming So Popular

    Understanding Dark Tourism: Why We Visit Places Associated with Death and Disaster. You may have heard the term "Dark Tourism" thrown around a lot lately. You may have seen it in the news lately—a tourist taking a grinning selfie in front of a memorial to the victims of a terrorist attack or a group of people posing for pictures on the grounds of a concentration camp.

  24. TSA wraps up spring semester with meaningful trip

    'Destination Innovation—Reimagining Place' was the 2023-2024 theme for the Tourism Student Association (TSA) at ASU. During a meaningful trip April 12-14, 2024, 31 members of TSA headed north to further explore this theme by studying dark, historical, nature-based and wine tourism as they relate to community development in the cities of Cottonwood and Jerome.