KOREASCHOLAR

WHAT DETERMINES ANIME PILGRIMS’ VISIT INTENTION AND DESTINATION LOYALTY?

Akinori Ono, Ryosuke Shimizu, Sumiaki Kawamura, Yasuto Nishimori, Yuki Oguro, Sari Yamamoto
  • LanguageENG
  • URLhttp://db.koreascholar.com/Article/Detail/315006
Global Marketing Conference
2016 Global Marketing Conference at Hong Kong (2016.07)
p.651
글로벌지식마케팅경영학회 (Global Alliance of Marketing & Management Associations)
Abstract

Japanese animation, called anime, has long been regarded as a niche culture reserved for ‘nerds’ (otaku) in Japan. The word otaku refers to individuals who spend most of their time alone at home watching anime, reading comics (manga) and/or playing video games. However, in recent years, otaku, or anime viewers, have changed their behavioral patterns, resulting in a new transcultural movement. That peculiar phenomenon is known as anime pilgrimage, which involves traveling to locations that resemble particular scenes in anime pieces, even though the locations themselves may be ordinary places. Research on ordinary tourism has focused mainly on destination attributes as determinants of visit intention/destination loyalty. Research on film tourism places additional emphasis on the role of film involvement. We focus here on social influences. The results of structured regression analyses show that our new models were superior to previous models that omitted investigation of social influences. Furthermore, the results show that though, during the pre-trip period “within home”, anime nerds may expect that they will interact primarily with other nerds, they enjoy interactions with the local people while traveling. Such transcultural experiences result in higher destination loyalty during the post-trip period “beyond home”.

Author
  • Akinori Ono(Keio University, Japan)
  • Ryosuke Shimizu(Keio University, Japan)
  • Sumiaki Kawamura(Keio University, Japan)
  • Yasuto Nishimori(Keio University, Japan)
  • Yuki Oguro(Keio University, Japan)
  • Sari Yamamoto(Keio University, Japan)