2002
DOI: 10.1016/s0160-7383(02)00054-3
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Auschwitz: Museum Interpretation and Darker Tourism

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Cited by 262 publications
(162 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, in the study by Biran et al (2010) to investigate the motivations of visitors to Auschwitz, education was the prime factor. Winter (2009) andMiles (2002) point out that memorial sites must have the capacity to stimulate feelings of empathy, piety and respect. Indeed, Switzer (2005) claims that honouring the war dead has become for many a sacred experience, symbolised in memorials, military cemeteries and communal ceremonies.…”
Section: Visiting Memorialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Indeed, in the study by Biran et al (2010) to investigate the motivations of visitors to Auschwitz, education was the prime factor. Winter (2009) andMiles (2002) point out that memorial sites must have the capacity to stimulate feelings of empathy, piety and respect. Indeed, Switzer (2005) claims that honouring the war dead has become for many a sacred experience, symbolised in memorials, military cemeteries and communal ceremonies.…”
Section: Visiting Memorialsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The stones, known as Stolpersteine (literally stumbling stones), are placed in the very spot where victims lived, imbuing them with the locational authenticity that Miles (2002) refers to: the memorial was evocative, calling to the viewer's imagination. The project belongs to the artist Gunter Demnig who has installed 43,500 stones since 1993 in several European countries (Demnig, 2014).…”
Section: Confronting Atrocitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The recent production of dark tourist imaginaries moves from conventional enactments of a reflexive journey to previous epochs (hence, imagined 'sites') of simulated happiness for foreign onlookers and tourists to the enactment of an activist ethic to improve the well-being of Greeks and their new refugee populations, both consigned to living in dire conditions. To define this darkness we borrow from what Miles (2002) terms 'darker tourism', Kaelber 'darkest tourism' (200ι) and Peirce (1998) debates in terms of an enactment of experience. Put simply, current tourist imaginaries of Greece look back to individual and collective/national histories that were eroded by time, intentionally modified and romanticised and therefore are today malleable by industries and individual tourists alike.…”
Section: Epistemology Methodology and Terminologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For some voices, dark tourism expresses a sadist nature, exploited by capitalist states to vulnerates the rights of minorities (Koch 2005), whereas for others it represents an anthropological attachment to death, very present in secularized societies (Lennon & Folley, 2000;Miles, 2002). What is clear, dark tourism connoting territories where mass-death or suffering have determined the identity of a community (Poria, 2007;Chauhan & Khanna, 2009).…”
Section: The Roots Of Dark Tourismmentioning
confidence: 99%