“Objects of Terror”: The Paranormal Tourist
It is undisputed that dark tourism, as already mentioned, is a part of cultural tourism. In colloquial terms, the cultural tourist wants to get to know the country and its people. The keyword here is authenticity, which means unadulterated, immediate encounters with locals and their cultural assets. One can discuss at length the illusory nature of this concept, but it is clear that the dark tourist is particularly guided by this idea. “The decisive factor for the increased interest in the shadowy sites of the 20th century is therefore not the fascination with death, but the aura of authenticity” [author’s translation] (Eisenhuth, 2017, p. 36). However, there are also areas where the concept of authenticity fails; for example, it is not clear how a building like Freiburg Cathedral could not be authentic unless there exists another fake cathedral somewhere else. An authentic experience is usually tied to people or events. This can be the birthplace of a celebrity, the “unadulterated” local, or, in the case of dark tourism, the experience of death and violence required by the academic definition. However, this principle also leads to conflicts, such as with memorial sites like Yad Vashem that are not placed at the location of the event they are commemorating and are therefore inauthentic. For the paranormal tourist, however, authenticity is likely one of the most basic principles. There are exceptions, of course: ghost trains and haunted amusement parks. Still, the paranormal tourist usually seeks out destinations that follow the formula: “Exactly the place where…”
Of course, this does not explain why they do so. Kolbe (2021) lists a whole range of motivations for this kind of tourism:
Is it sensationalism, the thrill of fear and horror, that drive ‘dark’ tourists? Or is it rather historical interest and empathy for the suffering of others? Motivation research usually shows a broad spectrum of motives, corresponding to the great diversity of sites counted among the destinations of dark tourism. They range from schadenfreude, the thrill of shuddering, seeking confrontation with death, interest in violence, empathic identification with victims and perpetrators, and curiosity about the unusual to the search for self-assurance or identity, the pursuit of knowledge, a sense of social responsibility (“Never again!”) and pilgrimage [author’s translation]. (Kolbe, 2021, p.69)
An, albeit predictable, mixture of motives from both types of dark tourist—the memorial visitor hopefully does not take pleasure in others’ misfortune, while the popular dark tourist is probably not inspired by a “sense of social responsibility.” The underlying question of why someone would consciously, voluntarily, and purposefully expose themselves to things generally considered terrible, hideous, or evil has always been asked and regularly revisited. It became especially prominent in aesthetic discourse from the eighteenth century onwards (cf. Alt, 2011, pp. 11–30; Noller, 2017, pp. 96–102; Zelle, 1990). This was mainly about looking at cruel and ugly paintings—Massacre of the Innocent Children by King Herodes, the Head of Medusa by Peter Paul Rubens—reading shocking books, the emerging gothic novel, or watching violent plays from Seneca to Shakespeare, but also the enjoyment of such “objects of terror,” as they were called in the English discourse, in themselves. The debate was conducted across Europe, intensified by the new genre of the gothic novel from the 1770s onwards.
Friedrich Schiller takes up this discussion in several of his theoretical texts on art: “It is a general phenomenon in our nature that the sorrowful, the terrible, the horrific entice us with irresistible charm, that we are equally repelled and drawn to scenes of misery and horror” [author’s translation] (Schiller as cited in Zelle, 1990, p. 58)—among other examples from art and literature, Schiller also mentions the then-common practice of attending public executions. The solutions offered by theorists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries for these impulses are mostly unconvincing: “A strange and unexpected event awakens the mind, and keeps it on the stretch” (Aikin, 1773 as cited in Norton, n.d.),[1] is just another, though not very explanatory, expression for delight in the extraordinary and unexpected.
Also often cited—by both contemporaries and later interpreters of the debate—is the motive of self-assurance, the reassurance as a “substitute for terror,” since the observed event can be rationalized as either fiction or not personally relevant. In reference to Max Weber’s disenchantment thesis, pleasure in horror is seen as compensation for a world demystified by the Enlightenment and later scientific modernity, and can be enjoyed in the safety of one’s living room. This argument is still alive today when explaining the popularity of TV crime dramas or horror films. The consumer is reassured that “in real life” there are neither vampires nor indestructible aliens, and that the detective always catches even the most cunning serial killer. The criticism of this approach is as old as it is justified, and the exact opposite is also asserted: periods of particular uncertainty or cruelty produce especially cruel and shocking works, as exemplified by the wave of brutal and extremely violent psychopathic horror films that emerged in the USA at the end of the Vietnam War. This feeling of exposing oneself, so to speak, from the safety of modern everyday life to an uncertain, fear-laden event exerts a certain appeal for the dark and especially the paranormal tourist can certainly be assumed.
Tourism and fear are not mutually exclusive. Of course, travelers want to avoid fears and uncertainties, such as tour operators going bankrupt or disease outbreaks in the destination country. Heuwinkel (2019) writes that,
In tourism, the conscious experience of fear-related situations can be found in various places. Examples include extreme sports, activities like shark cage diving, visiting townships or guided gangster tours. Some museums, such as the medieval torture museum in , can also be included [author’s translation]. (p. 165)
The latter example is clearly in the spectrum of dark tourism.[2] Heuwinkel’s (2019) explanation for the phenomenon ranges from biology—adrenaline release—to the already familiar self-assurance: “In this way, control is regained. Fear handled in this way can be recounted after the holiday or even posted during the experience” [author’s translation] (p. 166). As these examples are authentic, presumably non-fictional experiences, this thesis is even more questionable, or could apply mainly to the purely personal and not very empathetic feelings of the individual, since the fear-inducing events or places actually exist and continue to do so, be it townships—apparently understood as places of daily violence—or a haunted house. The dark tourist who then relaxes at home, enthusiastically recounting their experiences with photos, would come very close to being a cynic. However, it is hard to deny that fear[3] plays at least a partial role for the paranormal tourist.