dark tourism book

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Peter Hohenhaus

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Atlas of Dark Destinations: Explore the world of dark tourism

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dark tourism book

Atlas of Dark Destinations: Explore the world of dark tourism Hardcover – October 26, 2021

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  • Print length 352 pages
  • Language English
  • Publisher Laurence King Publishing
  • Publication date October 26, 2021
  • Dimensions 7.95 x 1.5 x 10.45 inches
  • ISBN-10 191394719X
  • ISBN-13 978-1913947194
  • See all details

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Atlas of Dark Destinations

Atlas of Dark Destinations: Explore the world of dark tourism

Reaching some of the darkest corners of the world, this is a compendium of travel destinations like no other.

From nuclear bunkers and disaster sites to strange medical museums and eerie catacombs, this book has something for everyone who seeks a travel experience with true meaning.

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About the author, product details.

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Laurence King Publishing (October 26, 2021)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 352 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 191394719X
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1913947194
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 3.32 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.95 x 1.5 x 10.45 inches
  • #6 in North Korea Travel Guides
  • #14 in Military Travel Guides
  • #382 in Travel Pictorial Reference Books

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Peter hohenhaus.

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Beaches? Cruises? ‘Dark’ Tourists Prefer the Gloomy and Macabre

Travelers who use their off time to visit places like the Chernobyl nuclear plant or current conflict zones say they no longer want a sanitized version of a troubled world.

A dark forest with broken branches over moss on its floor and bare, unhealthy-looking trees in the foreground. Trees in the background have more leaves.

By Maria Cramer

North Korea. East Timor. Nagorno-Karabakh, a mountainous enclave that for decades has been a tinderbox for ethnic conflict between Armenians and Azerbaijanis.

They’re not your typical top tourist destinations.

But don’t tell that to Erik Faarlund, the editor of a photography website from Norway, who has visited all three. His next “dream” trip is to tour San Fernando in the Philippines around Easter , when people volunteer to be nailed to a cross to commemorate the suffering of Jesus Christ, a practice discouraged by the Catholic Church.

Mr. Faarlund, whose wife prefers sunning on Mediterranean beaches, said he often travels alone.

“She wonders why on earth I want to go to these places, and I wonder why on earth she goes to the places she goes to,” he said.

Mr. Faarlund, 52, has visited places that fall under a category of travel known as dark tourism , an all-encompassing term that boils down to visiting places associated with death, tragedy and the macabre.

As travel opens up, most people are using their vacation time for the typical goals: to escape reality, relax and recharge. Not so dark tourists, who use their vacation time to plunge deeper into the bleak, even violent corners of the world.

They say going to abandoned nuclear plants or countries where genocides took place is a way to understand the harsh realities of current political turmoil, climate calamities, war and the growing threat of authoritarianism.

“When the whole world is on fire and flooded and no one can afford their energy bills, lying on a beach at a five-star resort feels embarrassing,” said Jodie Joyce, who handles contracts for a genome sequencing company in England and has visited Chernobyl and North Korea .

Mr. Faarlund, who does not see his travels as dark tourism, said he wants to visit places “that function totally differently from the way things are run at home.”

Whatever their motivations, Mr. Faarlund and Ms. Joyce are hardly alone.

Eighty-two percent of American travelers said they have visited at least one dark tourism destination in their lifetime, according to a study published in September by Passport-photo.online, which surveyed more than 900 people. More than half of those surveyed said they preferred visiting “active” or former war zones. About 30 percent said that once the war in Ukraine ends, they wanted to visit the Azovstal steel plant, where Ukrainian soldiers resisted Russian forces for months .

The growing popularity of dark tourism suggests more and more people are resisting vacations that promise escapism, choosing instead to witness firsthand the sites of suffering they have only read about, said Gareth Johnson, a founder of Young Pioneer Tours , which organized trips for Ms. Joyce and Mr. Faarlund.

Tourists, he said, are tired of “getting a sanitized version of the world.”

A pastime that goes back to Gladiator Days

The term “dark tourism” was coined in 1996, by two academics from Scotland, J. John Lennon and Malcolm Foley, who wrote “Dark Tourism: The Attraction to Death and Disaster.”

But people have used their leisure time to witness horror for hundreds of years, said Craig Wight, associate professor of tourism management at Edinburgh Napier University.

“It goes back to the gladiator battles” of ancient Rome, he said. “People coming to watch public hangings. You had tourists sitting comfortably in carriages watching the Battle of Waterloo.”

Professor Wight said the modern dark tourist usually goes to a site defined by tragedy to make a connection to the place, a feeling that is difficult to achieve by just reading about it.

By that definition, anyone can be a dark tourist. A tourist who takes a weekend trip to New York City may visit Ground Zero. Visitors to Boston may drive north to Salem to learn more about the persecution of people accused of witchcraft in the 17th century. Travelers to Germany or Poland might visit a concentration camp. They might have any number of motivations, from honoring victims of genocide to getting a better understanding of history. But in general, a dark tourist is someone who makes a habit of seeking out places that are either tragic, morbid or even dangerous, whether the destinations are local or as far away as Chernobyl.

In recent years, as tour operators have sprung up worldwide promising deep dives into places known for recent tragedy, media attention has followed and so have questions about the intentions of visitors, said Dorina-Maria Buda, a professor of tourism studies at Nottingham Trent University .

Stories of people gawking at neighborhoods in New Orleans destroyed by Hurricane Katrina or posing for selfies at Dachau led to disgust and outrage .

Were people driven to visit these sites out of a “sense of voyeurism or is it a sense of sharing in the pain and showing support?” Professor Buda said.

Most dark tourists are not voyeurs who pose for photos at Auschwitz, said Sian Staudinger, who runs the Austria-based Dark Tourist Trips , which organizes itineraries in the United Kingdom and other parts of Europe and instructs travelers to follow rules like “NO SELFIES!”

“Dark tourists in general ask meaningful questions,” Ms. Staudinger said. “They don’t talk too loud. They don’t laugh. They’re not taking photos at a concentration camp.”

‘Ethically murky territory’

David Farrier , a journalist from New Zealand, spent a year documenting travels to places like Aokigahara , the so-called suicide forest in Japan, the luxury prison Pablo Escobar built for himself in Colombia and McKamey Manor in Tennessee, a notorious haunted house tour where people sign up to be buried alive, submerged in cold water until they feel like they will drown and beaten.

The journey was turned into a show, “Dark Tourist,” that streamed on Netflix in 2018 and was derided by some critics as ghoulish and “sordid.”

Mr. Farrier, 39, said he often questioned the moral implications of his trips.

“It’s very ethically murky territory,” Mr. Farrier said.

But it felt worthwhile to “roll the cameras” on places and rituals that most people want to know about but will never experience, he said.

Visiting places where terrible events unfolded was humbling and helped him confront his fear of death.

He said he felt privileged to have visited most of the places he saw, except McKamey Manor.

“That was deranged,” Mr. Farrier said.

Professor Buda said dark tourists she has interviewed have described feelings of shock and fear at seeing armed soldiers on streets of countries where there is ongoing conflict or that are run by dictatorships.

“When you’re part of a society that is by and large stable and you’ve gotten into an established routine, travel to these places leads you to sort of feel alive,” she said.

But that travel can present real danger.

In 2015, Otto Warmbier , a 21-year-old student from Ohio who traveled with Young Pioneer Tours, was arrested in North Korea after he was accused of stealing a poster off a hotel wall. He was detained for 17 months and was comatose when he was released. He died in 2017, six days after he was brought back to the United States.

The North Korean government said Mr. Warmbier died of botulism but his family said his brain was damaged after he was tortured.

Americans can no longer travel to North Korea unless their passports are validated by the State Department.

A chance to reflect

Even ghost tours — the lighter side of dark tourism — can present dilemmas for tour operators, said Andrea Janes, the owner and founder of Boroughs of the Dead: Macabre New York City Walking Tours.

In 2021, she and her staff questioned whether to restart tours so soon after the pandemic in a city where refrigerated trucks serving as makeshift morgues sat in a marine terminal for months.

They reopened and were surprised when tours booked up fast. People were particularly eager to hear the ghost stories of Roosevelt Island, the site of a shuttered 19th-century hospital where smallpox patients were treated .

“We should have seen as historians that people would want to talk about death in a time of plague,” Ms. Janes said.

Kathy Biehl, who lives in Jefferson Township, N.J., and has gone on a dozen ghost tours with Ms. Janes’s company, recalled taking the tour “Ghosts of the Titanic” along the Hudson River. It was around 2017, when headlines were dominated by President Trump’s tough stance on refugees and immigrants coming into the United States.

Those stories seemed to dovetail with the 100-year-old tales of immigrants trying to make it to New York on a doomed ship, Ms. Biehl said.

It led to “a catharsis” for many on the tour, she said. “People were on the verge of tears over immigration.”

Part of the appeal of dark tourism is its ability to help people process what is happening “as the world gets darker and gloomier,” said Jeffrey S. Podoshen , a professor of marketing at Franklin and Marshall College, who specializes in dark tourism.

“People are trying to understand dark things, trying to understand things like the realities of death, dying and violence,” he said. “They look at this type of tourism as a way to prepare themselves.”

Mr. Faarlund, the photo editor, recalled one trip with his wife and twin sons: a private tour of Cambodia that included a visit to the Killing Fields , where between 1975 and 1979 more than 2 million Cambodians were killed or died of starvation and disease under the Khmer Rouge regime.

His boys, then 14, listened intently to unsparing and brutal stories of the torture center run by the Khmer Rouge. At one point, the boys had to go outside, where they sat quietly for a long time.

“They needed a break,” Mr. Faarlund said. “It was quite mature of them.”

Afterward, they met two of the survivors of the Khmer Rouge, fragile men in their 80s and 90s. The teenagers asked if they could hug them and the men obliged, Mr. Faarlund said.

It was a moving trip that also included visits to temples, among them Angkor Wat in Siem Reap, and meals of frog, oysters and squid at a roadside restaurant.

“They loved it,” Mr. Faarlund said of his family.

Still, he can’t see them coming with him to see people re-enact the crucifixion in the Philippines.

“I don’t think they want to go with me on that one,” Mr. Faarlund said.

dark tourism book

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The 2022 list highlights places around the globe where travelers can be part of the solution.

Follow New York Times Travel on Instagram , Twitter and Facebook . And sign up for our weekly Travel Dispatch newsletter to receive expert tips on traveling smarter and inspiration for your next vacation. Dreaming up a future getaway or just armchair traveling? Check out our 52 Places for a Changed World for 2022.

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Mumbai:  Spend 36 hours in this fast-changing Indian city  by exploring ancient caves, catching a concert in a former textile mill and feasting on mangoes.

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dark tourism book

The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies

  • © 2018
  • Philip R. Stone 0 ,
  • Rudi Hartmann 1 ,
  • Tony Seaton 2 ,
  • Richard Sharpley 3 ,
  • Leanne White 4

University of Central Lancashire, Preston, United Kingdom

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University of Colorado Denver, Denver, USA

University of limerick, limerick, ireland, victoria university, melbourne, australia.

  • Presents the first holistic academic study of dark tourism
  • Authored by an international selection of world-leading experts, established academics, emerging scholars and new academics
  • Combines empirical case studies with ‘real-world’ viewpoints from the tourism industry and the media

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271 Citations

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Table of contents (31 chapters)

Front matter, encountering engineered and orchestrated remembrance: a situational model of dark tourism and its history.

Tony Seaton

Crime, Punishment, and Dark Tourism: The Carnivalesque Spectacles of the English Judicial System

  • Tony Seaton, Graham M. S. Dann

Death and the Tourist: Dark Encounters in Mid-Nineteenth-Century London via the Paris Morgue

  • John Edmondson

The British Traveller and Dark Tourism in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century Scandinavia and the Nordic Regions

  • Kathryn Walchester

“The Smoke of an Eruption and the Dust of an Earthquake”: Dark Tourism, the Sublime, and the Re-animation of the Disaster Location

  • Jonathan Skinner

Thanatourism: A Comparative Approach

Dark tourism in an increasingly violent world.

  • Jeffrey S. Podoshen

Dark Tourism in an Age of ‘Spectacular Death’

  • Philip R. Stone

Dionysus Versus Apollo: An Uncertain Search for Identity Through Dark Tourism—Palestine as a Case Study

  • Rami K. Isaac, Vincent Platenkamp

Dark Tourism as Psychogeography: An Initial Exploration

  • Richard Morten, Philip R. Stone, David Jarratt

Dark Tourism, Difficult Heritage, and Memorialisation: A Case of the Rwandan Genocide

  • Mona Friedrich, Philip R. Stone, Paul Rukesha

‘Pablo Escobar Tourism’—Unwanted Tourism: Attitudes of Tourism Stakeholders in Medellín, Colombia

  • Anne Marie Van Broeck

Tourism Mobilities, Spectralities, and the Hauntings of Chernobyl

  • Kevin Hannam, Ganna Yankovska

Disasters and Disaster Tourism: The Role of the Media

  • Richard Sharpley, Daniel Wright

Denial of the Darkness, Identity and Nation-Building in Small Islands: A Case Study from the Channel Islands

  • Dark Tourism
  • Death and the Tourist
  • Re-Animation of the Disaster Location
  • Thanatourism
  • Disaster Tourism
  • Politics of Dark Tourism

About this book

Adopting multidisciplinary perspectives from authors representing every continent, the book combines ‘real-world’ viewpoints from both industry and the media with conceptual underpinning, and offers comprehensive and grounded perspectives of ‘heritage that hurts’. The handbook adopts a progressive and thematic approach, including critical accounts of dark tourism history, dark tourism philosophy and theory, dark tourism in society and culture, dark tourism and heritage landscapes, the ‘dark tourist’ experience, and the business of dark tourism. 

The PalgraveHandbook of Dark Tourism Studies will appeal to students and scholars with an interest in aspects of memorialisation and morality in sociology, death studies, history, geography, cultural studies, philosophy, psychology, business management, museology and heritage tourism studies, politics, religious studies, and anthropology.   

“Readers will find this book extremely useful for thinking about the concept, its meaning, and how it may be used to expand human understanding. The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies hits the sweet spot between accessibility and scholarly sophistication and balances the specific with the general and theoretical. … this handbook is essential, provocative, inspiring, and representative of the best and most experienced minds in the field.” (Kathryn N. McDaniel, Journal of Tourism History, March, 1, 2019)

Editors and Affiliations

Philip R. Stone, Richard Sharpley

Rudi Hartmann

Leanne White

About the editors

Rudi Hartmann is Associate Professor, University of Colorado Denver, USA.

Tony Seaton is MacAnally Professor of Tourism Behaviour and Travel History, University of Limerick, Republic of Ireland and Emeritus Professor of Tourism Behaviour, University of Bedfordshire, UK.

Richard Sharpley is Professor of Tourism & Development, University of Central Lancashire, UK.

Leanne White is Senior Lecturer in Marketing, Victoria University, Australia.

Bibliographic Information

Book Title : The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies

Editors : Philip R. Stone, Rudi Hartmann, Tony Seaton, Richard Sharpley, Leanne White

DOI : https://doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-47566-4

Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan London

eBook Packages : Social Sciences , Social Sciences (R0)

Copyright Information : The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s) 2018

Hardcover ISBN : 978-1-137-47565-7 Published: 02 March 2018

eBook ISBN : 978-1-137-47566-4 Published: 20 February 2018

Edition Number : 1

Number of Pages : XXXV, 768

Number of Illustrations : 70 b/w illustrations

Topics : Sociology of Sport and Leisure , Tourism Management , Sociology of Culture , Global/International Culture , Human Geography , Memory Studies

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IMAGES

  1. The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies

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  2. Dark Tourism (Paperback)

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  3. Dark Tourism by Malcolm Foley

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  4. Dark Tourism Studies

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  5. Explore the Dark Side: Books for Fans of Netflix's DARK TOURIST

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  6. What is Dark Tourism and why is it so Important? Answers here

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  1. Dark tourism #scary #creepy #mystery #scarystories #darktourism

  2. 50 Dark Destinations: Crime and Contemporary Tourism

  3. Dark Tourism: A Journey into the Unknown

  4. Фильм о туре "Путешествие на край света". Часть 2

COMMENTS

  1. Atlas of Dark Destinations: Explore the world of dark tourism

    Dark tourism has seen a surge in popularity in the last decade and this is the first book to bring together 300 destinations in a readable and fascinating guide. From nuclear bunkers and disaster sites to strange medical museums and eerie catacombs, this book has something for everyone who seeks a travel experience with true meaning.

  2. 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 ...

  3. The best books about 'dark tourism' and our difficult heritage

    This first-ever 'dark tourism' guide takes you to visitor sites across England associated with death, disaster, or the seemingly macabre. Dark tourism is travelling to places of fatality, where we get a sense of our own mortality through the stories of people who came before us. This book offers a thought-provoking compendium of a nation ...

  4. The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies

    The Palgrave Handbook of Dark Tourism Studies hits the sweet spot between accessibility and scholarly sophistication and balances the specific with the general and theoretical. … this handbook is essential, provocative, inspiring, and representative of the best and most experienced minds in the field." (Kathryn N. McDaniel, Journal of ...

  5. The Darker Side of Travel: The Theory and Practice of Dark Tourism

    Books. The Darker Side of Travel: The Theory and Practice of Dark Tourism. Richard Sharpley, Philip R. Stone. Channel View Publications, 2009 - Travel - 275 pages. The Darker Side of Travel is a contemporary and comprehensive analysis of dark tourism. Drawing on existing literature, numerous examples and introducing new conceptual perspectives ...

  6. Dark Tourism (Tourism, Leisure & Recreation) by Malcolm Foley

    Malcolm Foley, John Lennon. 3.82. 50 ratings5 reviews. This book sets out to explore dark tourism; that is, the representation of inhuman acts, and how these are interpreted for visitors at a number of places throughout the world, for example the sites of concentration camps in both Western and Eastern Europe. Many people wish to experience the ...

  7. Dark Tourism Studies

    Description. This book provides original, innovative, and international tourism research that is embedded in interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary theoretical and methodological thought in the study of dark tourism. It is almost 25 years since the idea of dark tourism was introduced and presented into the field of tourism studies. The impact ...

  8. home

    This is a comprehensive guide to travel to 'dark-tourism' destinations worldwide. Covering over a thousand individual dark places in 116 different countries. This site aims to promote (and also "rehabilitate") dark tourism (DT). There has been some negative reporting in the media about DT, often on the basis of an ill understood concept of DT ...

  9. Dark Tourism Studies

    This book provides original, innovative, and international tourism research that is embedded in interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary theoretical and methodological thought in the study of dark tourism.It is almost 25 years since the idea of dark tourism was introduced and presented into the field of tourism studies. The impact of this idea was greater, which attracted a great deal of ...

  10. Dark Tourism Books

    avg rating 3.69 — 756 ratings — published 1896. Want to Read. Rate this book. 1 of 5 stars 2 of 5 stars 3 of 5 stars 4 of 5 stars 5 of 5 stars. Books shelved as dark-tourism: Ghostland: An American History in Haunted Places by Colin Dickey, Dark Archives: A Librarian's Investigation into the Scie...

  11. Dark Tourism and Crime

    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 ...

  12. Dark Tourism Practice and interpretation

    Dark Tourism, as well as other terms such as Thanatourism and Grief Tourism, has been much discussed in the past two decades. This volume provides a comprehensive exploration of the subject from the point of view of both practice - how Dark Tourism is performed, what practical and physical considerations exist on site - and interpretation - how Dark Tourism is understood, including issues ...

  13. Dark Tourism: Practice and interpretation

    Dark Tourism. : Glenn Hooper, John J. Lennon. Routledge, Jul 15, 2016 - Science - 230 pages. Dark Tourism, as well as other terms such as Thanatourism and Grief Tourism, has been much discussed in the past two decades. This volume provides a comprehensive exploration of the subject from the point of view of both practice - how Dark Tourism is ...

  14. Dark Tourism

    Dark Tourism, as well as other terms such as Thanatourism and Grief Tourism, has been much discussed in the past two decades. This volume provides a comprehensive exploration of the subject from the point of view of both practice - how Dark Tourism is performed, what practical and physical considerations exist on site - and interpretation - how Dark Tourism is understood, including issues ...

  15. The Dark Tourist by Dom Joly

    Dark Tourism is a subject I'm generally interested in, and I like books about travel to unusual destinations) particularly such that I'm unlikely and/or unwilling to visit myself. Parts of this were interesting and thoroughly entertaining, in others the author came across as ignorant and prejudiced, with the humour at times falling flat.

  16. book

    You can order the book direct from the publishers - if you're in the UK then go to the home website of Laurence King Publishing Ltd ., if you're in one of the German-speaking countries, distribution is by the German branch LK Verlag, for the rest of the world use the US branch of Laurence King. The price is 25 GBP / 24 EUR / 29.99 USD.

  17. Dark Tourism and Crime

    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 ...

  18. Dark Tourism and Crime

    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 ...

  19. Dark Tourism

    Dark Tourism. J. John Lennon, Malcolm Foley. Continuum, 2000 - Business & Economics - 184 pages. A large number of sites associated with war, genocide, and other tragic events have become significant tourist destinations. This book explores the reasons why people visit these sites, asking whether it is for remembrance, education, or entertainment.