Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>

Antwerp, the fictional home of Nello &amp; Patrasche from <i>A Dog of Flanders</i> (1872) written by Marie Louise de la Ram&#233;e, attracts thousands of tourists every year to see the city and get close to the fictional text. European children&#8217;s literature such as this...

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Main Author: Lincoln Geraghty
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-05-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/2/90
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spelling doaj-1e2aea86aa12414fb71fccc135c0740e2020-11-24T21:44:53ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872019-05-01829010.3390/h8020090h8020090Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>Lincoln Geraghty0School of Film, Media and Communication, University of Portsmouth, Portsmouth PO5 2NA, UKAntwerp, the fictional home of Nello &amp; Patrasche from <i>A Dog of Flanders</i> (1872) written by Marie Louise de la Ram&#233;e, attracts thousands of tourists every year to see the city and get close to the fictional text. European children&#8217;s literature such as this inspires dedicated fans who long to make more real the imagined spaces described by authors. The city and associated monuments and markers become sites of secular pilgrimage; people traveling to them experience children&#8217;s literary culture as localheritage. Traveling across borders, visiting these European spaces of children&#8217;s literature, taking official and unofficial tours, and listening to the stories which people share while physically present help to secure a place in which international fans can play with notions of local identity and culturalheritage. Or, as Yi-Fu Tuan argues, &#8220;When space feels thoroughly familiar to us, it has become place.&#8221; This case study seeks to interrogate the importance of place in the transcultural fan community of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>. I analyse the touristic pilgrimage to Antwerp and the social/communal rituals associated with what John Urry calls the &#8220;mediatised gaze&#8221; as fans inhabit spaces typically reserved for city locals. This paper also considers the importance of place in the transcultural fan community of European children&#8217;s literature, discussing how glocalization allows texts to travel across international borders and encourage transcultural appropriation.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/2/90fandomtourism<i>A Dog of Flanders</i>AntwerptransculturalJapanglocalization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lincoln Geraghty
spellingShingle Lincoln Geraghty
Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
Humanities
fandom
tourism
<i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
Antwerp
transcultural
Japan
glocalization
author_facet Lincoln Geraghty
author_sort Lincoln Geraghty
title Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
title_short Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
title_full Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
title_fullStr Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
title_full_unstemmed Destination Antwerp! Fan Tourism and the Transcultural Heritage of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
title_sort destination antwerp! fan tourism and the transcultural heritage of <i>a dog of flanders</i>
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Antwerp, the fictional home of Nello &amp; Patrasche from <i>A Dog of Flanders</i> (1872) written by Marie Louise de la Ram&#233;e, attracts thousands of tourists every year to see the city and get close to the fictional text. European children&#8217;s literature such as this inspires dedicated fans who long to make more real the imagined spaces described by authors. The city and associated monuments and markers become sites of secular pilgrimage; people traveling to them experience children&#8217;s literary culture as localheritage. Traveling across borders, visiting these European spaces of children&#8217;s literature, taking official and unofficial tours, and listening to the stories which people share while physically present help to secure a place in which international fans can play with notions of local identity and culturalheritage. Or, as Yi-Fu Tuan argues, &#8220;When space feels thoroughly familiar to us, it has become place.&#8221; This case study seeks to interrogate the importance of place in the transcultural fan community of <i>A Dog of Flanders</i>. I analyse the touristic pilgrimage to Antwerp and the social/communal rituals associated with what John Urry calls the &#8220;mediatised gaze&#8221; as fans inhabit spaces typically reserved for city locals. This paper also considers the importance of place in the transcultural fan community of European children&#8217;s literature, discussing how glocalization allows texts to travel across international borders and encourage transcultural appropriation.
topic fandom
tourism
<i>A Dog of Flanders</i>
Antwerp
transcultural
Japan
glocalization
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/8/2/90
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