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Dark heritage tourism and the Sarajevo siege
Journal of Tourism and Cultural Change, 2016ABSTRACTSarajevo bears a rich and diverse cultural past, which includes the three distinct periods of the Ottoman occupation (1463–1878), the Austro–Hungarian rule (1878–1914) and the Yugoslav Federation (1945–1989). But the darkest chapter in its long history was about to be written just after Bosnia and Herzegovina was recognized as an independent ...
Marija Kamber a b +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
Dark tourism and World Heritage Sites: a Delphi study of stakeholder perceptions of the development of dark tourism products [PDF]
Dark tourism has attracted increasing academic attention, but the extent to which it exists as a separate form of tourism from heritage tourism is not yet clear.
James Kennell
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Soft power and dark heritage: multiple potentialities [PDF]
While positively connoted tangible cultural heritage is widely recognized as an asset to states in their exercise of soft power, the value of sites of ‘dark heritage’ in the context of soft power strategies has not yet been fully explored.
, Anna Čento Bull
exaly +2 more sources
2023
‘Dark heritage’ are legacies whose origin is often unwanted, dissonant, uncomfortable, and contested, and are often associated with sites and landscapes as people go through the processes of grieving, questioning, understanding, and (un)acceptance of a traumatic event, be it occurring from a human (e.g., genocide) or natural hazard (e.g., earthquake ...
Jazmin Scarlett +3 more
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‘Dark heritage’ are legacies whose origin is often unwanted, dissonant, uncomfortable, and contested, and are often associated with sites and landscapes as people go through the processes of grieving, questioning, understanding, and (un)acceptance of a traumatic event, be it occurring from a human (e.g., genocide) or natural hazard (e.g., earthquake ...
Jazmin Scarlett +3 more
openaire +2 more sources
Commemorative events at destination memorials – a dark (heritage) tourism context
© 2017 Darko Dimitrovski, Vladimir Senić, Dražen Marić and Veljko Marinković. Published with license by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Darko Dimitrovski +2 more
exaly +2 more sources
2021
Karst defences are sites of dark, shared heritage with Micronesian, Asian and American stakeholders. However, not all of these stakeholders consider karst defences as part of their heritage. Due to their association with death and atrocity, dark heritage sites such as karst defences have the potential to be rejected or outright denied.
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Karst defences are sites of dark, shared heritage with Micronesian, Asian and American stakeholders. However, not all of these stakeholders consider karst defences as part of their heritage. Due to their association with death and atrocity, dark heritage sites such as karst defences have the potential to be rejected or outright denied.
openaire +1 more source
The Dark Side of Digital Heritage:
2022Digital heritage as practice is rarely included in conversations about climate change or social justice which impact the wider field of cultural heritage. This paper provides an overview of some of the growing and complex environmental and ethical concerns that might be relevant to management, production and archiving of digital heritage projects. This
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Dark heritage as a basis for dark tourism development in Slovenia.
2020Abstract This chapter examines how the students of the Higher Vocational College for Hospitality, Wellness and Tourism (Bled, Slovenia) understand the concept of dark tourism, and explores their views relating to possibilities for the development of dark tourism in Slovenia.
L. Kužnik, B. Grafenauer
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