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Spectral cities: death and living memories in the dark tourism of British ghost walks

Spectral cities: death and living memories in the dark tourism of British ghost walks
Spectral cities: death and living memories in the dark tourism of British ghost walks

This article explores the role played by ghost walks in imparting and enlivening the histories of cities for tourists. Drawing upon research in York, London, Brighton and Edinburgh the article explores the manner in which the uncanny nature of the topic allows ghost walks to behave differently to other forms of dark tourism or thanatourism (Lennon and Foley 2000, Seaton 1996). Despite dealing with death and tragedy like other forms of dark tourism, the existence of ghosts within narratives allows for tragic history to be narrativised and performed by tour guides in a way that transforms the experience and embeds it within the cityscape anchoring memories and history to particular spaces, even long after a city has changed. Through tales of death the city's history is brought to life, but in a manner that is more entertaining than mournful due to the facilitation of the uncanny nature of ghosts.

36-51
Weston, Gavin
a90a20a4-d9df-4fda-b208-fb34e71d6f54
Woodman, Justin
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Cornish, Helen
d1286ebe-7f05-4148-ad09-9a0bcda419e0
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce
Weston, Gavin
a90a20a4-d9df-4fda-b208-fb34e71d6f54
Woodman, Justin
9b8a0656-4287-4d76-b68f-09742788a354
Cornish, Helen
d1286ebe-7f05-4148-ad09-9a0bcda419e0
Djohari, Natalie
90a32268-7e26-45f3-bd47-db9d5a3250ce

Weston, Gavin, Woodman, Justin, Cornish, Helen and Djohari, Natalie (2019) Spectral cities: death and living memories in the dark tourism of British ghost walks. Urbanities, 9 (2), 36-51.

Record type: Article

Abstract

This article explores the role played by ghost walks in imparting and enlivening the histories of cities for tourists. Drawing upon research in York, London, Brighton and Edinburgh the article explores the manner in which the uncanny nature of the topic allows ghost walks to behave differently to other forms of dark tourism or thanatourism (Lennon and Foley 2000, Seaton 1996). Despite dealing with death and tragedy like other forms of dark tourism, the existence of ghosts within narratives allows for tragic history to be narrativised and performed by tour guides in a way that transforms the experience and embeds it within the cityscape anchoring memories and history to particular spaces, even long after a city has changed. Through tales of death the city's history is brought to life, but in a manner that is more entertaining than mournful due to the facilitation of the uncanny nature of ghosts.

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Accepted_Manuscript Spectral Cities - Accepted Manuscript
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More information

Published date: 18 November 2019
Additional Information: Copyright © 2019 Urbanities Urbanities grants free and unrestricted access to the journal’s content for scientific, educational, noncommercial and non-promotional purposes.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471999
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471999
PURE UUID: 6a88e521-71f2-4af0-84cd-54a3c355ae96
ORCID for Natalie Djohari: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7636-2863

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 23 Nov 2022 17:52
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:16

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Contributors

Author: Gavin Weston
Author: Justin Woodman
Author: Helen Cornish
Author: Natalie Djohari ORCID iD

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