Title: In Our Wildest Imaginations: From Tragedy to Opportunity
1In Our Wildest ImaginationsFrom Tragedy to
Opportunity
2Text description
- Photo of disadvantaged children and fashion models
3- Presented by
- Stephen Gilson and Liz DePoy
- www.astos.org
- at Shippensburg University on November 17, 2009
4Our agenda for today
- Gaze backwards at the history of disability as
the basis for where we are today - Current thinking about disability
- Our vision and how to get there
5Text description
- Clip art cartoon of an agenda
6Remaining Snippets of History
7Text description
8Bodily Boundaries of Humanity in Early
Civilizations
- Who is worthy of being considered human?
- Ancient Greece often discarded extremely
anomalous neonates - In early western civilizations limits of humanity
were in part based on body compositions. - Deformed infants were not considered to be
human. - Less extreme bodies were considered to be human
variations.
9Middle Ages
- Individuals who were anomalous in appearance or
activity were purportedly placed on earth to
engender charity and tolerance in the masses. - Context Poor living conditions created
conditions which were considered to be typical
and in which sick and crippled bodies were not
atypical.
10Blind Leading the Blind, 1568 Breughel
11Text description
- Painting by Breughel Blind Leading the Blind,
1568
12Enlightenment
- Belief in demonology was slowly being replaced by
science. - The belief that illness and differences in human
activity occurred from that which could be
observed in the physical world is reflected in
the art of the renaissance period.
13Annibale Carracci, Hunchback, 16th-17th
centuries.The careful attention of the artist
details the anatomical shape of this individual
with an atypical physical appearance.
14Text description
- Sketch by Annibale Carracci Hunchback,
16th-17th centuries.
15- Why people did and did not behave in normal ways
became a major subject of many academic
disciplines with diverse explanations competing
for hegemony.
16The foundation of contemporary conceptualizations
- French statistician Quetelet formulated the
concept of "the normal man, who was both
physically and morally normal.
17Text description
18Where are we now?
19Two overarching intellectual trends
- Disability as deficit
- Medical-diagnostic
- Disability as internal to the body
- Emerged from ascendance of science and technology
- Disability as constructed
- Grew out of a counter-response to deviation and
objectification - Attempted to uncouple bodies from oppression and
discrimination - Looked to the social, political, economic,
physical etc. environment, not the body, as the
locus of disability - Emerged from post-modern thinking about diversity
20Medical Diagnostic
- Locates disability within humans and defines it
as an anomalous medical condition of long-term or
permanent duration.
21Current medical responsesdecrease disability
through individual accommodation
22Examples
- Giving extra time on a test to individuals with
diagnosed medical conditions - Professional intervention
- Building ramps for wheelchair users
23Constructed Explanations
- Disability is a condition that results from
limitations imposed on individuals (with or even
without diagnosed medical conditions) from
external factors. - Social
- Political
- Cultural
- Architectural
- Economic
24Social
- Negative Attitudes
- Negative Stereotype
- Stigma
- Devaluation
25Political
- Social oppression
- Minority group model- discrimination towards
difference
26Architectural
- Barriers in the built environment
- Architectural standard for standard body size,
shape, function
27Text description of image
- Picture of Da Vincis Vitruvian Man drawing
28Economic
- Cannot contribute through remunerative work
29Constructed Response
- Change the social, political, economic,
architectural cultural environments and leave the
body alone - Example
- ADA
30Contemporary Disciplinary Explanations
- Disability as social science
- ethical and political questions raised (e.g. Baby
Jane Doe, human rights, physician assisted
suicide, etc) - Disability as humanities
- disability as representational system more than a
medical problem, fabricated narrative of the body
(Garland- Thomson, 2004), media studies, design - Disability as science
- health, genetics, surveillance, engineering,
computer science, etc.
31Contemporary DisciplinaryResponses
- Thinking, studying, and innovation
32Zooming In on Disjuncture
33Text description of graphic
- Three images telescope, universe, and Earth
34Disability as Disjuncture
- Explains disability as an interactive ill-fit
between bodies (defined broadly) and environments
(defined broadly) - Brings us to query the universe of environmental
design and symbol in delineating the category of
disability and affixing the value of those who
fit within it.
35What is a body?
- The body, its appearance and its experience
- The sensory body
- The cognitive body
- The social-emotional body
- The spiritual body
- The economic body
- The productive body
- The body of ideas and meanings
- The body in multiple garb and spaces
36What is the Environment?
- The entire set of conditions under which one
operates including but not limited to - Physical
- Sensory
- Virtual
- Constructed (political, economic, social, etc.)
- Spiritual
- Expressive
- Intellectual
37environment
environment
environment
body
body
body
Full juncture
Moderate or compliance juncture
Disjuncture
38Text description of image
- Graphic depiction of disjuncture and juncture
39Disjuncture
Full Juncture Compliance (Moderate) Juncture Disjuncture
Environmental, space, and product design outcomes which take into account the full diversity of human bodies, ideas, experiences, preferences, contexts, aesthetics, and hold full participation as a value foundation (e.g., ambient environments, relevant technology, commercially available solutions). Environmental, space, and product outcome which responds to compliance with minimal legal physical access standards (e.g., mobility accommodations, Braille signage). Environmental, space, and product design outcome which does not account for access for diverse human bodies, preferences or experiences.
40- Our initial thinking about disjuncture emerged
from a conversation in a disability studies class
in which we asked students to reflect on the
current rationale for typical and accommodative
standards for built and virtual environments. The
students indicated that they just took these
environmental features for granted and had not
thought about why doorways, chair heights,
computer access and so forth could not be
reconceptualized differently.
41- We then consulted the literature and found the
following - Built and virtual environmental and product
design standards for industrial and post
industrial contexts are constructed around
Enlightenment ideals of the human body, its
balance, proportion, emphasis, rhythm, and unity
(Margolin, 2002)
42Fields and disciplines informing and teaching
disjuncture
- Political theory
- Economics
- Geography
- Engineering
- Medicine
- Sociology
- Business
- Education
- Law
- Art
- Technology
- Literature
- Disability studies
- Folklore
- Communications
- Philosophy
- Professions
- Computer science
43From Tragedy to Opportunity
44Healing Disjuncture (Creating Full Juncture)
- Change bodies, environments or both
- Eliminate binary categories of disabled/not
disabled - Eliminate segregation
- Provide multiple options in diverse venues
(commercial, professional) - Attend to aesthetics, context, complexity
- Map problems to reveal complexity and potential
directions for healing disjuncture
45Tragedy
46Opportunity
47Text from Colours (1)
- Like our products the personality of Colours is
that of leadership and understanding, "no pun
intended." We hope to provide an outlet to voice
suggestions, ultimately allowing you to change
the way people see the disabled and yourself. It
is our goal to increase each persons experiences
through mobility, education and most importantly,
the general societies awareness toward people.
48- Yes, we believe we produce some of the best
wheelchairs in the world. But, that is not what
we are bragging about. What we are really proud
of are the people who are using our chairs. They
are in our eyes individuals who have a spirit
unmatched by our competition. So, our thanks are
to you the customer for joining our mini
community and doing what you do best live your
life to the fullest!
49Opportunity Performing artists - ndaf.org
50Disability as Need
51Disability as Power
52Disability as Recipient of Technology Help
- Assistive technology is technology used by
individuals with disabilities in order to perform
functions that might otherwise be difficult or
impossible. (The National Center on Accessible
Information Technology in Education) What is a
Cognitive Prosthesis? - A cognitive prosthetic is assistive technology
that helps a person with cognitive deficits
function more independently in certain tasks.
Unlike other commercial products with similar
goals, it is not one piece of software or device,
but an entire system that helps the individual in
ways that are specific to that person's needs.
53Disability as Tech Marketing Power (WOW)
- Global ICT Demographics Whats at Stake
- 850 million personal computers
- 1 billion Internet users (includes shared and
mobile access) - 1.3 billion telephone land lines
- 1.5 billion TV sets
- 2.4 billion radios
- 2.7 billion cell phones, 1.8 billion text
messaging users
54 55Text description
56Putting this thinking to work
57Text description
- Two body builders of different heights and builds
58Our viewpoint
- Responses to disability must take an
intellectual and professional village. - Multiple perspectives must be married to design
and marketing thinking and action to advance
significant and lasting social change for people
with disabilities and communities across the
globe.
59Short Term thinking
- For the short-run, without the service and a
purposive, thoughtful market orientation becoming
friends with one another, services will continue
to de-value disability category members.
60Long-term thinking
- A generic environment that responds to the full
diversity of humans, and thus designer disability
services and products, that brand and segregate
humans into binary categories as they exist today
will not be necessary
61Short-Term Thinking
- For the short-run, without the service and a
purposive, thoughtful market orientation becoming
friends with one another, services will continue
to de-value disability category members.
62Long-Term Thinking
- A generic environment that responds to the full
diversity of humans, and thus designer disability
services and products, that brand and segregate
humans into binary categories as they exist today
will not be necessary
63So Now what?
- Using contemporary practices that are aligned
with larger powerful global trends typically not
thought of as disability and human rights
scholarship provides the opportunity for
significant change. - Lets watch, listen , think and hear the
opportunities - http//www.youtube.com/watch?v9Jgfp0hVwPI
64- Thank You!!!
- Questions and comments?