Mitigating Mortality Anxiety: Identifying Heritage Tourism’s Role in Terror Management
Keywords
heritage protection; heritage tourism; mortality anxiety; search for meaning in life; terror management theory
Abstract
Although terror management theory has been widely studied, little research has empirically examined whether travel functions as a terror management mechanism. Thus, the present research investigated the influence of mortality anxiety on heritage tourism preference and heritage protection intention through two studies. Study 1 shows that as individuals' general mortality anxiety increases, their tendency to search for meaning in life increases, which fosters their heritage travel preference and heritage protection intention. Study 2, using an experimental method, reveals a causal relationship where incidentally increasing mortality anxiety increases heritage travel preference and heritage protection intention. In addition, this causal relationship is prominent for people with higher legacy beliefs. These findings shed light on the critical roles of the search for meaning in life and legacy belief in the links between mortality anxiety and heritage-related behavior.
Publication Date
7-2023
Document Type
Paper
Language
English
Source Title
Journal of Travel Research
Volume
62
Issue
6
Copyright Status
Unknown
College
Rosen College of Hospitality Management
Location
Rosen College of Hospitality Management
STARS Citation
Lyu, Jiaying; Wang, Lili; and Wei, Wei, "Mitigating Mortality Anxiety: Identifying Heritage Tourism’s Role in Terror Management" (2023). Faculty Scholarship and Creative Works. 1217.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/ucfscholar/1217