Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1007249 Annals of Tourism Research 2013 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

This study examines the motivations and lived experiences of Israeli descendants of Holocaust survivors who set out on family roots trips to heritage sites and sites of atrocity accompanied by their survivor parents. Post-trip semi-structured interviews disclose the marginalization of historical heritage and post-tourist identity work. Instead, descendants highlight pathos-filled familial sociality. Co-presence in sites of atrocity enables the performance of survivor emotions tacitly present in the home thereby evoking descendant empathy and identification. Emergent “we-relationships” and family “home-making” while away calls for the deconstruction of binaries such as: ordinary/extraordinary, mundane/sacred, and home/away. Findings problematize the mystification of dark tourism and suggest the ‘domestication’ of secular pilgrimages. Finally a re-presencing of the family in mainstream tourism research is called for.

► Qualitative data presented on the little explored area of dark family tourism. ► Roots trips to sites of atrocity marginalize historical heritage and identity work. ► Descendants of Holocaust survivors seek emotive experience and familial sociality. ► Data deconstructs binaries: ordinary/extraordinary, mundane/sacred, home/away. ► Findings demystify dark atrocity tourism and domesticate the secular pilgrim.

Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Business, Management and Accounting Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management
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