1st Edition

Social Memory and Heritage Tourism Methodologies

256 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

256 Pages 50 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

The examination of social memory and heritage tourism has grown considerably over the past few decades as scholars have critically re-examined the relationships between past memories and present actions at international, national, and local scales. Methodological innovation and reflection have accompanied theoretical advances as researchers strive to understand representations, experiences,... Read more

1. Introduction Amy E. Potter and E. Arnold Modlin Jr.  Part I:  Digital Sources and Methods  2. “Don’t Forget”: Social Memory in Travel Blogs from Mostar, Bosnia and Herzegovina  Velvet Nelson  3. Webwashing the Tourism Plantation: Using Historic Websites to View Changes in the Representation of Slavery at Tourism Plantations  Candace Bright and David L. Butler  4. Virtual Ethnography: Placing Emotional Geographies via YouTube  Perry Carter  Part II:  Participatory Approaches  5. Historic Landscapes as Cooperative Animation: Exploring Networks of Memory with Photographic Methods  Ronald L. Schumann III  6. Is This How You Pictured It?  Perceived Values of Heritage Sites through the Lens of a Camera  Stefanie Benjamin  7. Commodifying the Commons: Mapping Memories and Changing Sense of Place on the Island of Barbuda  Amy E. Potter  8. Participatory Methodologies in Social Memory: Visualizing Life Histories for the Right to the City in Bogotá, Colombia Amy E. Ritterbusch  Part III:  New Takes on Familiar Methods  Musicscapes of Heritage and Memory  John C. Finn  10. Conversations about Slavery on Postcards: Making Meaning of a Key Tourism Site in St Augustine, Florida  E. Arnold Modlin Jr.  11. Seeing the Past in the Present through Archives and the Landscape  Chris W. Post  12. Reading the Commemorative Landscape with a Qualitative GIS Stephen P. Hanna and E. Fariss Hodder Epilogue Derek H. Alderman

Biography

Stephen P. Hanna is Professor of Geography at the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, where he has engaged in research on landscape, memory, and race for the past decade. Articles related to this work appear in Cartographica, Social and Cultural Geography, Southeastern Geographer, and cultural geographies.

Amy E. Potter is an Assistant Professor of Geography in the Department of History at Armstrong State University. Her research interests include the African Diaspora, cultural ecology, plantations, and communication geography, with a regional focus on the American South and the Caribbean.

E. Arnold Modlin is the Geography Instructor at Norfolk State University in Virginia.  Dr. Modlin’s research interest focus on the relationships between memory, identity, tourism and geography, particularly as they involve the construct of race.

Perry Carter is an Associate Professor of Geography in the department of Geosciences at Texas Tech University.  His research interests include theorizing race, space, and identity in both tourism landscapes of the American South and postcolonial Africa.  Articles related to this work appear in Tourism Geographies, Aether: The Journal of media Geography, Historical Geography, and the Professional Geographer.

David L. Butler is a full professor and chair of the Department of Political Science, International Development, and International Affairs at The University of Southern Mississippi. Butler’s research interests include race and tourism.