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Presents research on the methods and applications of tourism crisis management that takes an anthropological approach to tourism safety and security. The book highlights a range of topics, including disaster potential, political instability, and virtual terrorism.
Based on an anthropological viewpoint, the book not only discusses the nature of bottom days, but explores other related sub-themes such as capitalism, terrorism, dark tourism, the essence of evil and the power of prophecy, coining the term thana-capitalism to denote a new stage of capitalism where death is the main commodity exchanged.
This book discusses critically not only the obsession to consume disasters or news related to terrorism as a primary form of entertainment, but it also explores the theory of pleasure as it was formulated by ancient Greece and continued by Sigmund Freud.
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