Description
Thanatourism in India: Sites of Tragedy, Trauma and Heritage is a comprehensive academic exploration of tourism associated with death, tragedy, trauma, and remembrance within the Indian context. Moving beyond conventional notions of leisure tourism, this book examines how sites of suffering—such as battlefields, memorials, disaster locations, prisons, and sites of political and communal violence—are transformed into spaces of memory, heritage, and reflection.
Drawing on interdisciplinary perspectives from tourism studies, sociology, psychology, history, and cultural studies, the author critically analyses the concept of thanatourism (also known as dark tourism) and its relevance in India’s layered historical and cultural landscape. The book presents detailed theoretical discussions along with rich Indian case studies, including Jallianwala Bagh, Partition heritage sites, war memorials, disaster zones, and pandemic memorials, highlighting how collective memory, trauma, ethics, and identity intersect with tourism practices.
Special emphasis is placed on ethical and responsible tourism, community participation, policy frameworks, and the challenges of commodifying trauma. The work also explores the psychological motivations of visitors, sociocultural meanings of death, and the role of media and digital memory in shaping contemporary thanatourism.
This book is an essential resource for students, researchers, academicians, tourism professionals, policymakers, and anyone interested in understanding the complex relationship between tragedy, memory, and heritage in India. It serves both as a scholarly contribution and a reflective guide for engaging with sensitive historical landscapes respectfully and responsibly.













