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This edited collection expands scholarly and popular conversations
about dark tourism in the American West. The phenomenon of dark
tourism-traveling to sites of death, suffering, and disaster for
entertainment or educational purposes-has been described and, on
occasion, criticized for transforming misfortune and catastrophe
into commodity. The impulse, however, continues, particularly in
the American West: a liminal and contested space that resonates
with stories of tragedy, violent conflict, and disaster.
Contributions here specifically examine the mediation and shaping
of these spaces into touristic destinations. The essays examine
Western sites of massacre and battle (such as Sand Creek Massacre
National Historic Site and the "Waco Siege"), sites of imprisonment
(such as Japanese-American internment camps and Alcatraz Island),
areas devastated by ecological disaster (such as Martin's Cove and
the Salton Sea), and unmediated sites (those sites left to the
touristic imagination, with no interpretation of what occurred
there, such as the Bennet-Arcane camp).
This edited collection expands scholarly and popular conversations
about dark tourism in the American West. The phenomenon of dark
tourism-traveling to sites of death, suffering, and disaster for
entertainment or educational purposes-has been described and, on
occasion, criticized for transforming misfortune and catastrophe
into commodity. The impulse, however, continues, particularly in
the American West: a liminal and contested space that resonates
with stories of tragedy, violent conflict, and disaster.
Contributions here specifically examine the mediation and shaping
of these spaces into touristic destinations. The essays examine
Western sites of massacre and battle (such as Sand Creek Massacre
National Historic Site and the "Waco Siege"), sites of imprisonment
(such as Japanese-American internment camps and Alcatraz Island),
areas devastated by ecological disaster (such as Martin's Cove and
the Salton Sea), and unmediated sites (those sites left to the
touristic imagination, with no interpretation of what occurred
there, such as the Bennet-Arcane camp).
Hand anyone a pencil and paper and they can start drawing, but it's
just as easy to draw digitally using a keyboard and mouse. With
Make Your Own Pixel Art, pixel artist Jennifer Dawe and game
designer Matthew Humphries walk you step-by-step through the
available tools, pixel art techniques, the importance of shapes,
colours, shading, and how to turn your art into animation. By the
end of the book, you'll be creating art far beyond what's possible
on paper!
Deserts are highly emblematic spaces: dry, barren, isolated. In
literary and cinematic representations, they often betoken collapse
and dystopia. Reading Aridity in Western American Literature offer
readings of literature set in the US Southwest from ecocritical and
new materialist perspectives. The volume explores the diverse
epistemologies, histories, relationships, futures, and
possibilities that emerge from the representation of American
deserts in fiction, film, and literary art. The authors, as well,
trace the social, cultural, economic, and biotic narratives that
foreground deserts, and how these underscore the challenges of
climate change, ecojustice, and human and non-human flourishing. As
such, the volume rethinks what deserts are and provides a
constructive lens for seeing deserts as more than blank spaces,
rather as ecogeographies that challenge, critique, and urge
collective ecojustice action.
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