| Joseph R. Roach - 1996 - 356 pągines
...surrogation. In the life of a community, the process of surrogation does not begin or end but continues as actual or perceived vacancies occur in the network...cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure, I hypothesize, survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternates. Because collective memory... | |
| Marvin Carlson - 2003 - 218 pągines
...process. Surrogation, suggests Roach, occurs when "survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternates" into "the cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure." The fit, of course, can never be exact. "The intended substitute either cannot fulfill... | |
| Katrin Sieg - 2002 - 304 pągines
...follows: In the life of a community, the process of surrogation does not begin or end but continues as actual or perceived vacancies occur in the network...cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure, I hypothesize, survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternates. Because collective memory... | |
| Diana Taylor - 2003 - 360 pągines
...surrogation. In the life of a community, the process of surrogation does not begin or end but continues as actual or perceived vacancies occur in the network...cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure . . . survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternatives."" His example: "The King is dead,... | |
| Arlene R. Keizer - 2004 - 222 pągines
..."surrogation," the attempt to create substitutes for those who are no longer with us. Roach argues that, "[i]nto the cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure . . . survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternates" (2). While this may be an unconscious... | |
| Kathy Merlock Jackson - 2005 - 304 pągines
...(177). 8. "In the life of a community, the process of surrogation does not begin or end but continues as actual or perceived vacancies occur in the network of relations that constitutes the social fabric. . . . Because collective memory works selectively, imaginatively, and often perversely, surrogation... | |
| Hershini Bhana Young - 2006 - 252 pągines
...(1996) describes how within a community, "the process of surrogation does not begin or end but continues as actual or perceived vacancies occur in the network of relations that constitutes the social fabric" (2). Most important about the process of surrogation is its "uncanniness," "which tends to disturb... | |
| Gay Gibson Cima - 2006 - 217 pągines
...vacated a particular social space, as "surrogacy." He is especially interested in embodied performance: "into the cavities created by loss through death or other forms of departure," he suggests, "survivors attempt to fit satisfactory alternates." To illuminate the hybrid... | |
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