Credit: Cove Attractions
New research shows that visits to prison museums and other dark heritage sites are shaped less by labels, displays or audio guides, and more by how people experience them together. The findings follow a recent project that explored how people make sense of difficult heritage by examining how visitors experience exhibits at Peterhead Prison Museum, part of the Cove Group, in Scotland.
Led by Robert Gordon University in collaboration with King’s Business School, the University of Central Florida’s Rosen College of Hospitality Management and Edinburgh Napier University, the study, [publi…
Credit: Cove Attractions
New research shows that visits to prison museums and other dark heritage sites are shaped less by labels, displays or audio guides, and more by how people experience them together. The findings follow a recent project that explored how people make sense of difficult heritage by examining how visitors experience exhibits at Peterhead Prison Museum, part of the Cove Group, in Scotland.
Led by Robert Gordon University in collaboration with King’s Business School, the University of Central Florida’s Rosen College of Hospitality Management and Edinburgh Napier University, the study, published in the Annals of Tourism Research, found that the meaning of emotionally charged exhibits is not fixed in advance. Instead, it is created in real time through conversation, gestures, shared reactions and group dynamics.
The research shows that objects associated with punishment and suffering, such as whips or prison cells, take on different meanings depending on how people engage with them together. Shock, empathy, humor, discomfort and curiosity all emerge through interaction, not just through the artifacts themselves. In some cases, visitors use humor as a way to cope with disturbing material, while in others they align their body language or tone to signal shared seriousness or reflection.
The findings challenge the idea that heritage sites can fully control the visitor experience through design alone. While interpretation panels, audio guides and layouts matter, they do not determine how people understand or feel about what they encounter. Visitors actively negotiate meaning with one another, moment by moment, as they move through a space.
The study also questions the assumption that some sites are inherently "darker" than others. What feels disturbing, shocking or meaningful varies between groups, depending on relationships, shared cultural understanding and the dynamics of the moment. In practice, the perceived darkness of a site is constantly shifting.
"Visitors constantly look to one another to make sense of what they see. These everyday interactions shape how dark an exhibit feels and what people take away. Exhibitions should be designed with social interaction in mind, not just individual reflection," said Professor Dirk vom Lehn, professor of organization and practice at King’s Business School.
"Dark heritage is not something people simply consume. It is something they actively perform, negotiate and co-create with others. Understanding this social dimension is essential for anyone seeking to present difficult histories responsibly," said Dr. Rachael Ironside, corresponding author and associate professor at Robert Gordon University.
"This research powerfully reinforces what we see every day at Peterhead Prison and across Cove Attractions—people do not encounter difficult history alone, they make sense of it together. Learning, reflection and understanding happen through shared conversation, collective emotion and group experience," said Joel Campbell, CEO, Cove Group.
More information
Rachael Ironside et al, Social interaction and dark tourism in prison museums, Annals of Tourism Research (2026). DOI: 10.1016/j.annals.2025.104102
Citation: New research suggests people make sense of disturbing places together, not alone (2026, January 21) retrieved 21 January 2026 from https://phys.org/news/2026-01-people-disturbing.html
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