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Mourning Songs: Signing Practice Led Research in Everyday Life

aut.relation.endpage121
aut.relation.issue2
aut.relation.journalDesign, Art and Technology
aut.relation.startpage72
aut.relation.volume3
dc.contributor.authorO'Hara, Emily
dc.contributor.authorO'Connor, Maria
dc.date.accessioned2023-07-11T00:15:42Z
dc.date.available2023-07-11T00:15:42Z
dc.date.issued2018-11-16
dc.description.abstractThis project takes life-processes of mourning as underpinnings for its practice-led expression: Our article is structured over two interleaving grounds. The first, a site of intimacy expressed through a spatial practice of performance-installation, draws out methods of ‘site-writing’ (Jane Rendell) in relation to personal mourning. The second reaches deeper into an urban-collective ground of historic materialism (Walter Benjamin), working with specific sites this practice has ‘occupied’ or ‘site-written’. The thesis questions how personal-minor histories of mourning offer a significant contribution to urban sites, the public and associated fields of urban history, historic architecture and planning. It seeks to mine urban discourses through a site-specific practice set between urban design and performance-installation. It invites urban-otherness that extends perceived borders of the urban, folding its geological edges into telluric thresholds. This article touches on an original PhD practice-led contribution, in setting its discussion across scenes of personal mourning and urban remembrance.
dc.identifier.citationDesign, Art and Technology, ISSN: 2526-1789 (Print), 3(2), 72-121. doi: 10.29147/dat.v3i2.87
dc.identifier.doi10.29147/dat.v3i2.87
dc.identifier.issn2526-1789
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10292/16406
dc.languageEnglish/Portugese
dc.publisherAnhembi Morumbi University
dc.relation.urihttps://datjournal.anhembi.br/dat/article/view/87
dc.rightsDATJournal offers immediate free access to its content, following the principles of the Budapest Open Access Initiative, understanding that making the scientific knowledge available to the public free of charge leads to greater worldwide democratization of knowledge.
dc.rights.accessrightsOpenAccess
dc.subjectdeath
dc.subjectineffable
dc.subjectmourning
dc.subjectruins
dc.subjectsilence
dc.subjecturban
dc.titleMourning Songs: Signing Practice Led Research in Everyday Life
dc.typeJournal Article
pubs.elements-id352533

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