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Download fileEmpire and its Aftermath in Four (Post-)Colonial Settings
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posted on 2015-11-16, 10:21 authored by Clare Anderson, Eureka Henrich, S. Longair, Katherine RoscoeThis chapter explores the history of prison tourism and its various contemporary manifestations in four colonial and post-colonial settings associated with the British Empire: Fremantle (Walyalup) and Rottnest Island (Wadjemup) in Western Australia; the Andaman Islands of India; and Changuu [Prison] Island in Zanzibar. It will analyse how and why each of these sites emerged historically as tourist attractions, and how and why they remain appealing to visitors today. Part of the explanation lies in the ecology of spaces that were attractive as prisons and remain alluring as leisure destinations, but it is also to do with their imbrication in wider narratives of nationalist struggle, (de)colonisation and nation building. [First paragraph] Copyright © Macmillan Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.
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Anderson, C.; Henrich, E.; Longair, S.; Roscoe, K., 'Empire and its Aftermath in Four (Post-)Colonial Settings' in Wilson, J. Z., Hodgekinson, S., Piche, J., Walby, K. (eds.) 'The Palgrave Handbook of Prison Tourism', Palgrave, 2017, pp. 609-629.Author affiliation
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