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Erasure (band)
Erasure may refer to: Arts and media * Erasure (duo), an English pop group * ''Erasure'' (album), 1995, by the British group Erasure * Erasure poetry, a form of found poetry created by erasing words from an existing text * ''Erasure'' (novel), 2001, by Percival Everett Science and technology * Data erasure, a method of software-based overwriting that completely destroys all electronic data * Erasure channel, a communication channel model wherein errors are described as erasures * Erasure code, a forward error correction (FEC) code for the binary erasure channel * Type erasure, a process by which explicit type annotations are removed from a program * Zeroisation, a process of erasing sensitive data stored electronically by overwriting it Other uses * Erasure (heraldry), the removal of portions of charges in heraldry * Social amnesia or social invisibility, the separation or systematic ignoring of a history or a group of people ** , Latin phrase meaning 'condemnation of memory' ...
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Erasure (duo)
Erasure ( ) are an English synth-pop duo formed in London in 1985, consisting of lead vocalist and songwriter Andy Bell (singer), Andy Bell and songwriter, producer and keyboardist Vince Clarke, previously co-founder of the band Depeche Mode and a member of synth-pop duo Yazoo (band), Yazoo. From their fourth single, "Sometimes (Erasure song), Sometimes" (1986), Erasure established themselves on the UK Singles Chart, becoming one of the most successful acts of the mid-1980s to the mid-1990s. From 1986 to 2007, the pair achieved 24 consecutive top-40 entries in the UK singles chart. By 2009, 34 of their 37 chart-eligible singles and EPs had made the UK top 40, including 17 climbing into the top 10. At the 9th Brit Awards, 1989 Brit Awards, Erasure won the Brit Awards, Brit Award for Brit Award for British Group, Best British Group. Erasure made their debut with the studio album ''Wonderland (Erasure album), Wonderland'' in 1986, although it did not perform well chart-wise. With ...
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Social Amnesia
Social amnesia is a collective forgetting by a group of people. The concept is often cited in relation to Russell Jacoby's scholarship from the 1970s. Social amnesia can be a result of "forcible repression" of memories, ignorance, changing circumstances, or the forgetting that comes from changing interests.David Rothenberg, Marta UlvaeusThe new earth reader the best of Terra Nova page 57, 74 Protest, folklore, "local memory", and collective nostalgia are counter forces that combat social amnesia. Social amnesia is a subject of discussion in psychology and among some political activists. In the U.S., social amnesia has been said to reflect "the tendency of American penology to ignore history and precedent when responding to the present or informing the future... discarded ideas are repackaged; meanwhile, the expectations for these practices remain the same." Fits of social amnesia after difficult or trying periods can sometimes cover up the past, and fading memories can actually ma ...
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Erased (other)
Erased may refer to: * "Erased", a 2002 song by Paradise Lost from '' Symbol of Life'' * "Erased", a 2009 song by Dead by April from '' Dead by April'' * "Erased", a 2014 song by Volumes from '' No Sleep'' * "Erased", a 2018 song by Cane Hill from '' Too Far Gone'' * ''Erased'' (manga), a 2012 Japanese manga series by Kei Sanbe which received an anime television adaptation in 2016 and a live-action television adaptation in 2017 * ''Erased'' (2012 film), an action-thriller film directed by Philipp Stölzl * ''Erased'' (2016 film), the 2016 Japanese live-action film based on the manga * ''Erased'' (2018 film), a Slovenian drama film directed by Miha Mazzini * Erased (heraldry), a blazonry term * The Erased, a term for people in Slovenia without legal citizenship status See also * Erase (other) * Eraser (other) * Erasure (other) Erasure may refer to: Arts and media * Erasure (duo), an English pop group * ''Erasure'' (album), 1995, by the British gr ...
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Erase (other)
Erase may refer to: * ''Erase'' (album), a 1994 death metal album by Gorefest *" Erase/Rewind", a 1998 pop/rock song by The Cardigans *"Erase", a song by All That Remains from the 2002 album ''Behind Silence and Solitude'' *"Erase", a song by Imminence from the 2019 album '' Turn the Light On'' *"Erase", a song by In Hearts Wake from the 2015 album '' Skydancer'' *"Erase", a song by Neurosis and Jarboe from the 2003 album '' Neurosis & Jarboe'' *"Erase", a song by They Might Be Giants from the 2015 album '' Glean'' See also * Deletion (other) *Erased (other) * Eraser (other) *Erasure (other) Erasure may refer to: Arts and media * Erasure (duo), an English pop group * ''Erasure'' (album), 1995, by the British group Erasure * Erasure poetry, a form of found poetry created by erasing words from an existing text * ''Erasure'' (novel), ...
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Sous Rature
''Sous rature'' is a strategic philosophical device originally developed by Martin Heidegger. Though never used in its contemporary French terminology by Heidegger, it is usually translated as 'under erasure', and involves the crossing out of a word within a text, but allowing it to remain legible and in place. Used extensively by Jacques Derrida, it signifies that a word is "inadequate yet necessary"; that a particular signifier is not wholly suitable for the concept it represents, but must be used as the constraints of our language offer nothing better. In the philosophy of deconstruction, ''sous rature'' has been described as the typographical expression that seeks to identify sites within texts where key terms and concepts may be paradoxical or self-undermining, rendering their meaning undecidable. To extend this notion, deconstruction and the practice of ''sous rature'' also seek to demonstrate that meaning is derived from difference, not by reference to a pre-existing notion ...
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LGBT Erasure
Queer erasure (also known as LGBTQIA+ erasure) refers to the tendency to intentionally or unintentionally remove LGBTQ groups or people from record, or downplay their significance, which includes lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer people. This erasure can be found in a number of written and oral texts, including popular and scholarly texts. In academia and media Queer historian Gregory Samantha Rosenthal refers to queer erasure in describing the exclusion of LGBTQ history from public history that can occur in urban contexts via gentrification. Rosenthal says this results in the "displacement of queer peoples from public view". Cáel Keegan describes the lack of appropriate and realistic representation of queer people, HIV-positive people, and queer people of color as being a type of aesthetic gentrification, where space is being appropriated from queer people's communities where queer people are not given any cultural representation. Erasure of LGBTQ people has t ...
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Damnatio Memoriae
() is a modern Latin phrase meaning "condemnation of memory" or "damnation of memory", indicating that a person is to be excluded from official accounts. Depending on the extent, it can be a case of historical negationism. There are and have been many routes to including the destruction of depictions, the removal of names from inscriptions and documents, and even large-scale rewritings of history. The term can be applied to other instances of official scrubbing. The practice has been seen as early as the Ancient Egypt, Egyptian New Kingdom of Egypt, New Kingdom period, where the Pharaohs Hatshepsut and Akhenaten were subject to it. After Herostratus set fire to the Temple of Artemis, one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, Seven Wonders of antiquity, the people of Ephesus banned the mention of his name. His name has since become an eponym for people who commit crimes for the purpose of gaining notoriety. Etymology Although the term is Latin, the phrase was not used ...
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Social Invisibility
Social invisibility is the condition in which a group of people is separated or systematically ignored by the majority of a society. As a result, those who are marginalized feel neglected or being invisible in the society. It can include disadvantaged, elderly homes, child orphanages, homeless people or anyone who experiences a sense of being ignored or separated from society as a whole. Psychological consequences The subjective experience of being unseen by others in a social environment is social invisibility. A sense of disconnectedness from the surrounding world is often experienced by invisible people. This disconnectedness can lead to absorbed coping and breakdowns, based on the asymmetrical relationship between someone made invisible and others. Among African-American men, invisibility can often take the form of a psychological process that both deals with the stress of racialized invisibility, and the choices made in becoming visible within a social framework that prede ...
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Erasure (heraldry)
The heads of humans and other animals are frequently occurring charge (heraldry), charges in heraldry. The blazon, or heraldic description, usually states whether an animal's head is couped (as if cut off cleanly at the neck), erasure (heraldry), erased (as if forcibly ripped from the body), or cabossed (turned attitude (heraldry), affronté without any of the neck showing). Human heads are often described in much greater detail, though some of these are identified by name with little or no further description. Forms of display Heads may appear: * cabossed (also caboshed or caboched): with the head cleanly separated from the neck so that only the face shows * couped: with the neck cleanly separated from the body so that the whole head and neck are present *erased: with the neck showing a ragged edge as if forcibly torn from the body. Heads that are couped or erased face dexter and sinister, dexter unless otherwise specified for differencing. Heads of horned beasts are often sho ...
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Erasure (album)
''Erasure'' is the seventh studio album by English synth-pop duo Erasure, released on 23 October 1995 by Mute Records. It was produced by Thomas Fehlmann (of the Orb) and Gareth Jones. An overtly experimental and introspective album, ''Erasure'' contains 11 mostly mid-tempo tracks that differed from their past output of shiny, three-minute pop songs. Most tracks clock in at five minutes or more, several contain long synth interludes, and guest artists include the London Community Gospel Choir and performance artist Diamanda Galás. Although appreciated for its experimental nature, ''Erasure'' marked the beginning of Erasure's slide from the peak of their popularity in the mainstream music world. Coming off four consecutive number-one albums in the UK, this album failed to hit the top 10, and two single releases also missed the UK top ten. After a successful top 20 debut on the ''Billboard'' 200 for their previous album '' I Say I Say I Say'', ''Erasure'' debuted and peaked at ...
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Zeroisation
In cryptography, zeroisation (also spelled zeroization) is the practice of erasing sensitive parameters (electronically stored data, cryptographic keys, and critical security parameters) from a cryptographic module to prevent their disclosure if the equipment is captured. This is generally accomplished by altering or deleting the contents to prevent recovery of the data. Mechanical When encryption was performed by mechanical devices, this would often mean changing all the machine's settings to some fixed, meaningless value, such as zero. On machines with letter settings rather than numerals, the letter 'O' was often used instead. Some machines had a button or lever for performing this process in a single step. Zeroisation would typically be performed at the end of an encryption session to prevent accidental disclosure of the keys, or immediately when there was a risk of capture by an adversary. Software In modern software based cryptographic modules, zeroisation is made consider ...
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Type Erasure
In programming languages, type erasure is the load-time process by which explicit type annotations are removed from a program, before it is executed at run-time. Operational semantics not requiring programs to be accompanied by types are named ''type-erasure semantics'', in contrast with ''type-passing semantics''. Type-erasure semantics is an abstraction principle, ensuring that the run-time execution of a program doesn't depend on type information. In the context of generic programming, the opposite of type erasure is named reification. Type inference The reverse operation is named type inference. Though type erasure can be an easy way to define typing over implicitly typed languages (an implicitly typed term is well-typed if and only if it is the erasure of a well-typed explicitly typed lambda term), it doesn't provide Rule of inference Rules of inference are ways of deriving conclusions from premises. They are integral parts of formal logic, serving as norms of ...
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