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Anime pilgrimage in Japan:
Focusing
Social Influences as determinants
Ono, Akinori et al., 2020
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Citations Laugrand & Simon, 2020
Journal
Article
Laugrand, Frédéric;
Simon,
Lionel
Anthropologica, Vol 62(1), 2020, 124-130
Anthropologica, Vol 62(1), 2020, 124-130
Cited by 1236
Japanese animation,
anime,
has
long
been
regarded as a niche culture reserved for
anime
otaku
in
Japan. The
word anime otaku refers to individuals who
spend
most of
their time
alone at home, watching anime. However, in
recent
years,
prototypical anime otaku have changed their
behavioral
patterns,
resulting in a new movement called anime
pilgrimage.
Anime
pilgrimage involves traveling to locations
that
resemble
particular
scenes in anime pieces, even though the
locations
themselves
may be
ordinary places. The authors constructed two
models
to
describe the
determinants of visit intention and
destination
loyalty
based on
research into ordinary and film tourism. The
results
suggested that,
during the pre-tour period, otaku are
motivated
by
the
desire for
interaction with other otaku and the wish to
visit a
new
location.
Moreover, they are also seeking to interact
with
the
local
people,
and such experiences result in higher
destination
loyalty
during the
post-tour period. (PsycInfo Database Record
(c)
2021
APA,
all rights
reserved)
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