ORCID

Abstract

This paper uses the Bodmin Jail Attraction in Cornwall, UK, as a case study to explore how sites of dark tourism have been subsumed into infantilised consumer culture. In these commodified, disney-esque forms, rather than being spaces of reflection and education, they act to perpetuate objective violence. This allows us to fetishise the subjective violence of the past and disavow our participation in or acceptance of present and future harms. Using a conceptual framework that connects dark tourism with historical and sensory criminology, we analyse data gathered from a field analysis of Bodmin Jail, alongside the analysis of 1505 Trip Advisor reviews of the attraction. We contend that, through the appropriation of dark histories and the goal of attracting infantilised consumers, these sites (re)inforce the importance of satisfied visitors, rather than introspective and socially aware citizens. We contend that through this disavowal of our contemporary shortcomings, the broader social implications of this are the risk of widespread objective violence.

Publication Date

2025-06-29

Publication Title

Crime, Media, Culture: An International Journal

Acceptance Date

2025-01-01

Deposit Date

2025-12-23

Funding

The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article: Made possible by internal funding from the University of Plymouth

Keywords

Consumer culture, dark tourism, historical criminology, infantilisation, objective violence, prison tourism, sensory criminology

Share

COinS