The Great War battlefield landscape of the Western Front still exerts an enormous potency for tourists even though much of its geography requires significant decoding to understand its now hidden narratives. Thousands of British visitors travel to the area throughout the year, drawn to empathize with its symbolic commemorative spaces. This essay explores the ways in which tourists embarking on commercial coach tours engage with the battlefield landscape by examining contemporary tourist performance, as well as the role of the tour guide in setting and directing their imaginative and emotional encounter with the area
The article, analyzing the experiences of visitors of WWI museums of Gorizia and Kobarid, considers ...
The “economy of history” in France, or history as a motor for French economic activity, is of great ...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This paper provides insights into the motivations and experiences of tourists who visit sites associ...
The sites of war have varied from single fields of battle, to those at sea and in the air, to the lo...
Current research about the pro-active role of tourism in valorizing war memories and landscapes stil...
Battlefield sites are some of the most iconic locations in any nation’s store of heritage attraction...
This paper seeks to explore the practice of battlefield tourism in the Ypres Salient (Belgium) since...
The First World War Centenary (2014–2018) is stimulating much interest in the memory of this conflic...
The travel and tourism industry is connected to the ideas of leisure and relaxation, however not all...
After the Great War of 1914-18 social memories were created to assist people to grieve for, honor an...
There has been much discussion by scholars about the efficacy of the term ‘dark tourism’ with a call...
War is a uniquely human institution, frequently lacking logic but always characterised by paradox. O...
Historical tourism resources associated with diasporic communities and battlefields would at face va...
The Battle of the Dardanelles (Çanakkale), also known as the Gallipoli Campaign, played a crucial ro...
The article, analyzing the experiences of visitors of WWI museums of Gorizia and Kobarid, considers ...
The “economy of history” in France, or history as a motor for French economic activity, is of great ...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...
This paper provides insights into the motivations and experiences of tourists who visit sites associ...
The sites of war have varied from single fields of battle, to those at sea and in the air, to the lo...
Current research about the pro-active role of tourism in valorizing war memories and landscapes stil...
Battlefield sites are some of the most iconic locations in any nation’s store of heritage attraction...
This paper seeks to explore the practice of battlefield tourism in the Ypres Salient (Belgium) since...
The First World War Centenary (2014–2018) is stimulating much interest in the memory of this conflic...
The travel and tourism industry is connected to the ideas of leisure and relaxation, however not all...
After the Great War of 1914-18 social memories were created to assist people to grieve for, honor an...
There has been much discussion by scholars about the efficacy of the term ‘dark tourism’ with a call...
War is a uniquely human institution, frequently lacking logic but always characterised by paradox. O...
Historical tourism resources associated with diasporic communities and battlefields would at face va...
The Battle of the Dardanelles (Çanakkale), also known as the Gallipoli Campaign, played a crucial ro...
The article, analyzing the experiences of visitors of WWI museums of Gorizia and Kobarid, considers ...
The “economy of history” in France, or history as a motor for French economic activity, is of great ...
A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of Wolverhampton for ...