{"title":"美国种植园奴隶制的黑暗历史:网站推广和TripAdvisor评论中访问者的看法","authors":"S. Cavalieri, Sara Corrizzato, Valeria Franceschi","doi":"10.5937/zrffp52-39989","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The visual and linguistic representations of tourism destinations for promotional aims may be affected by their primary function of acquiring new visitors; for this reason, they are not always \"value-free expressions of a place's identity\" (Pritchard & Morgan, 2001, p. 177). The concept of dark tourism seems to perfectly mirror the connection between terminological choices and culturally-bound constraints. It has been acknowledged that several dark tourism sites tend to valorise (or hide) events associated with tragedy and death, attracting tourists' interest for their (non)macabre details at the expense of historical objectivity. This is the case of plantation houses in the US, whose narrative on slavery has often been \"whitewashed\" and minimized (e.g., Harnay, 2022; Butler, 2001; Eichstedt & Small, 2002). This study aims at investigating how visitors to popular plantation destinations in the US perceive and evaluate the presentation of the experience of slavery in these sites vis-à-vis what is presented on the plantation websites. The analysis is therefore twofold: first, a qualitative multimodal study of the content included in the websites of the plantations will shed light on whether the websites include information on the role of slave labour in the plantations, and secondly, a corpus-assisted investigation of the visitors' reviews posted on TripAdvisor will attempt to clarify how visitors perceive the plantations as a tourist location, and the importance they place on receiving honest information about the brutality of slavery during their visits. The mixed-methods approach has allowed researchers to delve into this phenomenon from two opposite, but intertwined, perspectives: one driven by experts officially promoting the visit through the websites and the other offered by visitors sharing their personal experiences and feelings.","PeriodicalId":55773,"journal":{"name":"Zbornik Radova Filozofskog Fakulteta u Pristini","volume":"40 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The dark past of slavery in American plantation houses: Website promotion and perceptions of visitors in TripAdvisor reviews\",\"authors\":\"S. 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This study aims at investigating how visitors to popular plantation destinations in the US perceive and evaluate the presentation of the experience of slavery in these sites vis-à-vis what is presented on the plantation websites. The analysis is therefore twofold: first, a qualitative multimodal study of the content included in the websites of the plantations will shed light on whether the websites include information on the role of slave labour in the plantations, and secondly, a corpus-assisted investigation of the visitors' reviews posted on TripAdvisor will attempt to clarify how visitors perceive the plantations as a tourist location, and the importance they place on receiving honest information about the brutality of slavery during their visits. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
旅游目的地的视觉和语言表达可能会受到吸引新游客的主要功能的影响;由于这个原因,它们并不总是“一个地方身份的价值自由表达”(Pritchard & Morgan, 2001, p. 177)。黑暗旅游的概念似乎完美地反映了术语选择和文化约束之间的联系。众所周知,一些黑暗旅游景点倾向于夸大(或隐藏)与悲剧和死亡有关的事件,以牺牲历史客观性为代价,以其(非)可怕的细节吸引游客的兴趣。这就是美国种植园的情况,其关于奴隶制的叙述经常被“粉饰”和最小化(例如,Harnay, 2022;巴特勒,2001;Eichstedt & Small, 2002)。本研究旨在调查美国热门种植园目的地的游客如何感知和评估这些网站中奴隶制经历的呈现(参见-à-vis种植园网站上呈现的内容)。因此,分析是双重的:首先,对种植园网站中包含的内容进行定性多模式研究,将阐明网站是否包含种植园中奴隶劳工的信息;其次,对游客在TripAdvisor上发布的评论进行语料辅助调查,将试图澄清游客如何看待种植园作为一个旅游景点,以及他们在访问期间接受有关奴隶制残酷的诚实信息的重要性。混合方法的方法使研究人员能够从两个相反但相互交织的角度深入研究这一现象:一个是由专家通过网站正式推广访问,另一个是由访问者分享他们的个人经历和感受。
The dark past of slavery in American plantation houses: Website promotion and perceptions of visitors in TripAdvisor reviews
The visual and linguistic representations of tourism destinations for promotional aims may be affected by their primary function of acquiring new visitors; for this reason, they are not always "value-free expressions of a place's identity" (Pritchard & Morgan, 2001, p. 177). The concept of dark tourism seems to perfectly mirror the connection between terminological choices and culturally-bound constraints. It has been acknowledged that several dark tourism sites tend to valorise (or hide) events associated with tragedy and death, attracting tourists' interest for their (non)macabre details at the expense of historical objectivity. This is the case of plantation houses in the US, whose narrative on slavery has often been "whitewashed" and minimized (e.g., Harnay, 2022; Butler, 2001; Eichstedt & Small, 2002). This study aims at investigating how visitors to popular plantation destinations in the US perceive and evaluate the presentation of the experience of slavery in these sites vis-à-vis what is presented on the plantation websites. The analysis is therefore twofold: first, a qualitative multimodal study of the content included in the websites of the plantations will shed light on whether the websites include information on the role of slave labour in the plantations, and secondly, a corpus-assisted investigation of the visitors' reviews posted on TripAdvisor will attempt to clarify how visitors perceive the plantations as a tourist location, and the importance they place on receiving honest information about the brutality of slavery during their visits. The mixed-methods approach has allowed researchers to delve into this phenomenon from two opposite, but intertwined, perspectives: one driven by experts officially promoting the visit through the websites and the other offered by visitors sharing their personal experiences and feelings.