Abstract
This article revisits and updates a discussion of the cultural function and prominence of the mermaid in 20th and 21st century Catalina Island (California) that originally appeared in the journal Contemporary Legend in 2013. Drawing on recent critical-theoretical work on the concept of the aquapelago and of the aquapelagic imaginary, I examine the manner in which the deployment of mermaid imagery on Catalina island is related to the location's orientation to coastal and marine tourism. In particular, I examine the interplay between the conscious deployment of iconography and broader patterns of social use, examining the manner in which the local aquapelagic imaginary has been developed as a cultural asset in the island's destination branding and more general representation of place.
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Hayward, P. (2019). Elaborating the aquapelagic imaginary: Catalina Island, tourism and mermaid iconography. Journal of Marine and Island Cultures, 8(2), 89–102. https://doi.org/10.21463/jmic.2019.08.2.07
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