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A master's thesis from Aalborg University
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Master Thesis: New ways of understanding dark tourism sites: a case study of The Kingsley Plantation

Translated title

Master Thesis

Author

Term

4. term

Education

Publication year

2018

Submitted on

Abstract

This thesis examines how the dark tourism site of Kingsley Plantation in Jacksonville, Florida—a former cotton plantation marked by slavery—is constructed through different mobilities within its current setting as part of the Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve. The site’s dual role as a recreational national park landscape and a place of difficult heritage creates a tension that attracts both locals and tourists. Drawing on mobility studies—especially the staging mobilities framework that distinguishes top‑down staging (planning, regulation, design) from bottom‑up staging (embodied practices and social interactions)—together with dark tourism and experience theory, the study addresses three questions: How is the site staged from above? How is it staged from below? And how is “darkness” categorized and produced through practice—and can a mobility perspective nuance the concept of dark tourism? Methodologically, the research is a qualitative case study featuring six days of fieldwork on site, participant observation, autoethnographic fieldnotes, semi‑structured conversations with visitors, and longer interviews with former visitors and Park Rangers, supported by secondary sources and considerations of rigor and ethics. The analysis covers infrastructure, interpretation of the dark past, building design, guided tours, everyday uses of the area, and a darkest‑to‑lightest spectrum. The aim is to explore how darkness is not fixed but emerges through intersecting mobilities, stagings, and use situations; specific findings and conclusions are presented in the full thesis and are not included in the excerpt provided here.

Dette speciale undersøger, hvordan det mørke turismested The Kingsley Plantation i Jacksonville, Florida – en tidligere bomuldsplantage med en historie om slaveri – bliver konstrueret gennem forskellige mobiliteter i en nutidig ramme som del af Timucuan Ecological and Historic Preserve. Kombinationen af et rekreativt nationalparklandskab og et historisk sted præget af død og lidelse skaber et spændingsfelt, der tiltrækker både lokale og turister. Med udgangspunkt i mobilitetsstudier, især rammerne for iscenesættelse ovenfra (planlægning, regulering, design) og nedenfra (kropslige praksisser og sociale interaktioner), samt mørk turisme og oplevelsesteori, stiller projektet tre spørgsmål: Hvordan iscenesættes stedet ovenfra? Hvordan iscenesættes det nedenfra? Og hvordan kategoriseres og skabes “mørket” gennem praksisser – og kan mobilitetsblik nuancere mørk turisme-begrebet? Metodisk bygger undersøgelsen på et kvalitativt casestudie med seks dages feltarbejde på stedet, deltagerobservation, autoetnografiske feltnoter, semistrukturerede samtaler med besøgende samt længere interviews med tidligere besøgende og park­rangers, suppleret af sekundære kilder og refleksioner over troværdighed og etik. Analysen omfatter bl.a. infrastruktur, formidling af den mørke fortid, bygningers design, guidede ture, hverdagsbrug af området og et spektrum fra “mørkt” til “lyst”. Formålet er at udforske, hvordan mørket ikke er givet på forhånd, men bliver til i samspil mellem mobiliteter, iscenesættelser og brugssituationer; konkrete resultater og konklusioner præsenteres i den fulde afhandling og fremgår ikke af det uddrag, der er gengivet her.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]