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OverviewMemorial sites, sites of OC dark tourism, OCO are vernacular spaces that are continuously negotiated, constructed, and reconstructed into meaningful places. Using the locale of the 9/11 tragedy, Joy Sather-Wagstaffa explores thea constructive role played by tourists in understanding social, political, and emotional impacts of a violent event that has ramifications far beyond the local population. Through in-depth interviews, photographs, graffiti, even souvenirs, she compares the 9/11 memorial with other hurtful sitesOCothe Oklahoma City National Memorial, Vietnam VeteranOCOs Memorial, and othersOCoto show how tourists construct and disperse knowledge through performative activities, which make painful places salient and meaningful both individually and collectively. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Joy Sather-WagstaffPublisher: Left Coast Press Inc Imprint: Left Coast Press Inc Edition: New ed. ISBN: 9781598746686ISBN 10: 1598746685 Pages: 244 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Book Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsReviews. ..the book leads us to consider the fascinating question of why and how we are driven to construct and visit sites that memorialize mass death and horrific tragedy, and what uniquely human needs are fulfilled when we do so. --Museum Magazine Author InformationJoy Sather-Wagstaff is an assistant professor of anthropology at North Dakota State University. Her research focuses on tourists' experiences at memorial museums and commemorative landscapes, material, visual and intangible culture, memory, community history collection, vernacular photography, cultures of collecting, and disasters. Her publications include: Beyond Content: Thematic, Discourse-centred Qualitative Methods for Analysing Visual Data (forthcoming in 2010, in An Introduction to Visual Research Methods in Tourism); Folk Epigraphy as Intangible Heritage at the World Trade Center, Oklahoma City and Beyond (2009, in Intangible Heritage Embodied); Picturing Experience: A Tourist-centred Perspective on Commemorative Historical Sites. (2008, Tourist Studies: An International Journal). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |