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・ Roadshow Players
・ Roadshow Revival
・ Roadshow theatrical release
・ Roadside
・ Roadside (musical)
・ Roadside Ambanis
・ Roadside America
・ Roadside America (disambiguation)
・ Roadside assistance
・ Roadside attraction
・ Roadside Attractions
・ Roadside conservation
・ Roadside hawk
・ Roadside Heretics
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Roadside memorial
・ Roadside Monument
・ Roadside Monument / Frodus
・ Roadside park
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・ Roadside Poppies
・ Roadside Prophets
・ Roadside Rambler
・ Roadside Romeo
・ Roadside station
・ Roadside, Caithness
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・ Roadsong
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・ Roadsongs (The Derek Trucks Band album)


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Roadside memorial : ウィキペディア英語版
Roadside memorial

A roadside memorial is a marker that usually commemorates a site where a person died suddenly and unexpectedly, away from home. Unlike a grave site headstone, which marks where a body is laid, the memorial marks the last place on earth where a person was alive – although in the past travelers were, out of necessity, often buried where they fell.
Usually the memorial is created and maintained by family members or friends of the person who died. A common type of memorial is simply a bunch of flowers, real or plastic, taped to street furniture or a tree trunk. A handwritten message, personal mementos etc. may be included. More sophisticated memorials may be a memorial cross, ghost bike, or a plaque with an inscription, decorated with flowers or wreaths.
==Meaning and message==

Roadside memorials are a statement of grief and love from the loved ones of the accident victim(s).〔 Reid, A., 2015. Place, Meaning, and the Visual Argument of the Roadside Cross, Savannah Law Review, vol. 2, pp.265-300 ()〕
But apart from their personal significance, these memorials also serve as a reminder and warning to other road users of the dangers of driving, and to encourage safer driving.〔Tay, R., Churchill, A. & de Barros, A. 2011. Effect of roadside memorial on traffic flow, Accident Analysis and Prevention, vol. 43, pp.483-486〕〔Tay, R. 2009. Drivers’ perceptions and reactions to roadside memorials, Accident Analysis and Prevention, vol. pp.41, 663-669〕 In the 1940s and 1950s, the Arizona State Highway Patrol began using white crosses to mark the site of fatal car accidents. This practice was continued by families of road-crash victims after it had been abandoned by the police. The ghost bike phenomenon, where an old bicycle is painted white and locked up at an accident site, serves the same purpose in relation to cycling casualties.
Historically, roadside memorials were personal memorials, but there is a modern trend toward public memorials of increasingly large size. Typically little or no effort is made to make the memorials accommodate the natural beauty of the landscape and many roadside memorials, over time, lack proper maintenance.
The phenomenon of roadside memorials may be associated with another growing trend: public outpouring of grief for celebrities. The death of Diana, Princess of Wales, for example, precipitated an avalanche of flowers and wreaths at the Pont de l'Alma road tunnel in Paris, the site of her death, and at Kensington Palace, her home in London. While car-crash victims are rarely so well known, something of the same sort of impulse to make a public display of emotion at the site of a tragedy may be partly responsible for the growing popularity of roadside memorials.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Roadside memorial」の詳細全文を読む



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