resituate

resituate

(riːˈsɪtjʊˌeɪt)
vb (tr)
US to situate elsewhere; relocate
Collins English Dictionary – Complete and Unabridged, 12th Edition 2014 © HarperCollins Publishers 1991, 1994, 1998, 2000, 2003, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2014
References in periodicals archive ?
As right-wing parties use immigrant Muslim women's liberation as a way to sugar-coat their anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant agendas, though their cultural and economic policies they resituate female Muslim immigrants as care bearers of the nation who should provide the affect labour from which European women were "emancipated." The book reminds us of the racialization of women's emancipation: as Western women broke the bonds of care labour and went out to join the open market of work under capitalism, the burden of care labour fell on the shoulders of women of colour--in this book's case, Muslim women immigrants and non-Western female immigrants.
Drawing from theorists such as Doreen Massey, Marc Auge, Edward Soja, Manuel Castells and Zygmunt Bauman, the book's contributors strive to resituate the study of Canadian Literature by engaging with diverse literary manifestations of the trope of the 'glocal' city.
In her article on positioning theory, Melanie James suggests that the application of this theoretical model helps to resituate public relations in the field of communications rather than in the realm of organisation or management, where it has long been based.
What one can do in producing and reading literature and film is to resituate the role of such symbolic gestures of naming and provide a means for situating literature in relation to a continuum of human and nonhuman materiality.
The correctives proposed resituate Hugo, removing him from the central pedestal where he obscured posterity's view of realities defining Romantic drama and overshadowed the writers, directors, actors, and professionals whose business it was to fill Paris' playhouses and their coffers.
His two objectives are to map this contestation and also resituate the forest as a mirror for progressive as well as reactionary German politics.
In order to integrate our educational philosophy into the wider Vassar curriculum, the Writing Center has had to resituate itself within that curriculum.
Norman's study is an impressive effort to resituate African American cultural arts from the civil rights era to their contemporary phase, and thereby promises to be an influential text for scholars of twentieth-century literary studies.
Anything but naive, Chakkalakal's excellent, succinct readings of William Wells Brown, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Frank Webb, Frances Harper, and Charles Chesnutt fearlessly resituate texts and their interactions with readers, upending our assumptions and challenging the work of many recent critics.
In regard to land, cults and individuals alike localise heaven, hell and purgatory in what Lanas deems a bid to resituate 'the moral geographies through which modern institutions seek to form Melanesian subjects and their horizons.'(101).
Unfortunately, Egnal's new preface does too little to rebut his critics and resituate his argument in light of recent scholarship.