Dark Tourism: Understanding the Concept and Recognizing the Values

Authors

  • Ramesh Raj Kunwar APF Command and Staff College, Nepal
  • Neeru Karki Department of Conflict, Peace and Development Studies, Tribhuvan University, Nepal

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3126/japfcsc.v2i1.26731

Keywords:

Dark tourism, authenticity, supply and demand, emotion, experience

Abstract

Dark tourism is a youngest subset of tourism, introduced only in 1990s. It is a multifaceted and diverse phenomenon. Dark tourism studies carried out in the Western countries succinctly portrays dark tourism as a study of history and heritage, tourism and tragedies. Dark tourism has been identified as niche or special interest tourism. This paper highlights how dark tourism has been theoretically conceptualized in previous studies. As an umbrella concept dark tourism includes than tourism, blackspot tourism, morbid tourism, disaster tourism, conflict tourism, dissonant heritage tourism and others. This paper examines how dark tourism as a distinct form of tourism came into existence in the tourism academia and how it could be understood as a separate subset of tourism in better way. Basically, this study focuses on deathscapes, repressed sadism, commercialization of grief, commoditization of death, dartainment, blackpackers, darsumers and deathseekers capitalism. This study generates curiosity among the readers and researchers to understand and explore the concepts and values of dark tourism in a better way.

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Published

2019-12-15

How to Cite

Kunwar, R. R., & Karki, N. (2019). Dark Tourism: Understanding the Concept and Recognizing the Values. Journal of APF Command and Staff College, 2(1), 42–59. https://doi.org/10.3126/japfcsc.v2i1.26731

Issue

Section

Articles