Heritage through Fiction. Dracula Tourism in Romania
: Hovi Tuomas
Publisher: University of Turku
: Turku
: 2014
: 978-951-29-5765-1
: http://www.doria.fi/handle/10024/98458
Heritage and tourism have become inextricably linked. This link can be seen as producing
inauthentic and falsified tradition, and it can therefore be seen as a threat to
cultural heritage. On the other hand the link can be seen as a positive thing, as something
which helps to preserve heritage, culture and folklore in a changing and globalising
world. This dissertation investigates heritage in the context of Dracula Tourism
in Romania. Dracula tourism is tourism where tourists visit places connected with
either the fictional vampire Dracula or the historical Dracula, a Romanian historical
ruler Vlad the Impaler.
The main research question of this study is how can Romanian heritage and culture
be shown and promoted through a seemingly superficial Dracula tourism which
is based on Western popular culture? And is it possible to find Romanian heritage
through popular fiction in Dracula tourism? The main sources for this work are
based on the fieldwork done by the author in 2010 and 2011 and the web pages of ten
Romanian travel agencies that offer Dracula tourism. The stories and images found
on the web pages and used by the tour guides form the bulk of the research material.
The emphasis and perspective of this research is folkloristic. Critical discourse analysis
and multimodal discourse analysis form the main theoretical approach of this
dissertation. In addition the research material is approached through intertextuality,
folklore process, hybridisation, authenticity and social constructionism.
This dissertation aims to offer new perspectives on the research literature concerning
tourism and heritage and to offer a folkloristic view of tourism research. It also aims
to offer new perspectives to folkloristics in terms of the research on the use of folklore
and tradition and offer new perspectives on the use and definition of the concept of
authenticity. Although the research subject of this thesis is Dracula tourism in Romania,
the findings can be utilised and applied in a larger context and field of research.
The key research findings show that heritage can be found within Dracula Tourism
in three forms: as defined from above (UNESCO World Heritage Sites), as local
heritage and as a form of opposition. The Romanian travel agencies researched in
this dissertation use Dracula tourism as a gateway into Romanian history, culture,
tradition and heritage.