Observing Memories Issue 3 | Page 10

This contribution aims to explore 4 aspects of the interactions between tourism and places of memory, which will be discussed on the basis of the literature: 1/ Tourism and painful memories: Tourism associated with painful memories has been a largely globalized phenomenon, which nevertheless reflects contrasted memory dynamics. 2/ Tourism, places of memory and politics: The tourist attractiveness of places of memory is part of complex processes where “memory work” (travail de mémoire) and tourism development interact, in response to numerous challenges, revealing the political dimension of tourism; 1/ Tourism and painful memories: Tourism associated with painful memories has been a largely globalized phenomenon, which nevertheless reflects contrasted memory dynamics. Bosnia and Herzegovina, South Africa, Cambodia, Vietnam, Ireland, Armenia, Guatemala: for several decades, remembrance tourism has been globalized. The most visited sites have long been European or American sites (some historians locate the origins of “battlefield” tourism in Gettysburg during the Civil War) but today the phenomenon is global. Adopting a functionalist logic, some researchers explain it by 3/ Places of memory and tourists’ contributions: Tourists inscribe their practices in the geography of places of memory officially produced and marketed. This is a process that questions tourists’ motivations and experiences. Tourists also actively contribute to the production of constantly recomposed spaces of memory, through practices that can lead to a redefinition of the notion of a place of memory. the widespread presence of violence in the world: «few geographical areas escape memories marked by violence variously linked to dictatorships, mass crimes, totalitarianisms or genocides» (Chevalier, Lefort, 2016). However, this approach conceals the very contrasting dynamics that characterize the geography of remembrance tourism according to the contexts, the complexities of perceptions and practices that can be associated with it, the possible dynamics of transformation, forgetting and rememoration. The global scale of the phenomenon may refer to the analysis of the historian Henry 4/ The social function of “rememebrance tourism” in question: The rise of tourism and its massification in some places has given rise to many debates and discussions in the academic world and beyond, about the social functions of “remembrance tourism” and its efficiency in transmitting memory. Rousso: «All over the world, despite different political or cultural contexts, despite the extreme diversity of historical legacies, the way societies deal with the past has not only undergone significant structural changes in the last third decades of the 20th century, but it has tended to unify, to “globalize”, to encourage forms of collective representations and public action that, at least in appearance, are increasingly similar» (Rousso, 2007). Other researchers emphasize “dynamics of memory”, in the constant making, dependant on movement and circulation, suggesting to rethink social memory as a manifestation and result of globalization and global media culture. Astrid Erll 8 Observing Memories ISSUE 3