@article{Korstanje_2018, title={Review of The Western Front: Landscape, Tourism and Heritage}, volume={16}, url={https://ojsull.webs.ull.es/index.php/Revista/article/view/1600}, DOI={10.25145/j.pasos.2018.16.079}, abstractNote={<p>In the recent decades, some voices alerted on the emergence of new morbid destinations, where the main commodity was death. Dark tourism, Thana Tourism, War tourism and so forth questioned the hedonist nature of sand-and-sun products. However, at a closer look, it is tempting to say that war and culture are inextricably intertwined. From this belief departs the present book which is entitled <em>The Western Front: landscapes, tourism and heritage, </em>authored by Stephen Miles. The main goal of this work consists in discussing the conceptual tensions between forgetting and rememorizing past battles and episodes of conflicts. Though much has been written about the archeological sites of battlefronts left by Second World War, less is said respecting to First World War´s Western front. Over these years, the western front has situated as a highly-demanded sites of tourists and visitors interested in knowing further on what happened in this historic and large-scale military conflict.</p>}, number={4}, journal={PASOS Revista de Turismo y Patrimonio Cultural}, author={Korstanje, Maximiliano Emanuel}, year={2018}, month={oct.}, pages={1143–1144} }