Issue Details: First known date: 2023... 2023 Crime Experiences at Dark or ‘Gothic’ Tourism Sites : Edutainment and Storytelling at the Melbourne Watch House (Australia)
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'Storytelling is a vital feature of most crime and law enforcement related tourism sites. The Melbourne City Watch House (Australia) uses interactive and immersive storytelling techniques to create ‘edutainment’ opportunities for tourists, placing it on the ‘lighter’ end of Philip Stone’s ‘dark tourism’ spectrum. This paper examines how the site utilises storytelling techniques and immersive experiences to provide a Gothically entertaining, yet educational experience for tourists. For example, tourists can be ‘searched’, ‘locked-up’ and have mug shots taken within a cell. Within the analysis, Philip Stone’s ‘dark tourism’ spectrum and Gothic tourism frameworks are used to explore the tour and how the storytelling techniques become acceptable despite the ‘dark’ nature of the site and exhibits themselves. The use of actors to dramatise the experience provides audiences with a unique Gothic adventure that leaves visitors unsettled, yet entertained. Utilising participatory ‘theatre’ techniques and framing the narrative around ‘law enforcement’ versus ‘offenders’ enables such sites to promote ‘lighter’ forms of entertainment while nevertheless romanticising state power. It is evident that the voices of those detained at the Watch House are either silenced or manipulated through the storytelling process to reinforce political narratives around effective law enforcement.' 

(Publication abstract)

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    y separately published work icon Aeternum : The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies vol. 10 August 2023 27285214 2023 periodical issue 'Avid readers of Aeternum may have noted that there was no 9.2 (December 2022) issue of the Journal published, nor is there are issue number attached to this current volume. As we reach the landmark tenth volume of the Journal this year, the Editors have made the decision to proceed with annual publication. Aeternum: The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies will now be published as a single volume each August. The Journal continues to welcome article and review submissions on a rolling basis throughout the year and remains an exclusively online, open access publication.' (Ashleigh Prosser and Lorna Piatti-Farnell : Editorial introduction) 2023 pg. 45-68
Last amended 15 Dec 2023 09:15:05
45-68 Crime Experiences at Dark or ‘Gothic’ Tourism Sites : Edutainment and Storytelling at the Melbourne Watch House (Australia)small AustLit logo Aeternum : The Journal of Contemporary Gothic Studies
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