1st Edition
Liminality in Tourism Spatial and Temporal Considerations
1. Spatial and temporal tourism considerations in liminal landscapes
Robert S. Bristow and Ian S. Jenkins
2. The liminality in popular festivals: identity, belonging and hedonism as values of tourist satisfaction
Lorena Rodríguez-Campo, Fátima Braña-Rey, Elisa Alén-González and José Antonio Fraiz-Brea
3. Transformative landscapes: liminality and visitors’ emotional experiences at German memorial sites
Doreen Pastor and Alexander J. Kent
4. Dark tourism and moral disengagement in liminal spaces
Nitasha Sharma
5. Liminality and difficult heritage in tourism
Velvet Nelson
6. Communitas in fright tourism
Robert S. Bristow
7. South African township residents describe the liminal potentialities of tourism
Meghan L. Muldoon
8. Between space and place in mountaineering: navigating risk, death, and power
Maggie C. Miller and Heather Mair
9. Change within the change: pregnancy, liminality and adventure tourism in Mexico
Isis Arlene Díaz-Carrión, Paola Vizcaino-Suárez and Hugo Gaggiotti
10. Liminality at-sea: cruises to nowhere and their metaworlds
Bradley Rink
11. Liminality in nature-based tourism experiences as mediated through social media
Eugenio Conti and Susanna Heldt Cassel
12. Liminality Wanted. Liminal landscapes and literary spaces: The Way of St. James
Rubén C. Lois González and Lucrezia Lopez
Biography
Robert S. Bristow is Professor in the Department of Geography, Planning and Sustainability at Westfield State University, Massachusetts, USA. His research interests include cultural resource management in parks and protected areas and fright tourism.
Ian Jenkins was Associate Professor at the Department of Geography and Tourism, University of Iceland and is currently a visiting Associate Professor there. Published research includes the areas of festivals, sustainable tourism, literary tourism, adventure tourism, together with risk and safety management.






