ABSTRACT

This edited volume explores blindness as a construct with which we the contributors engage as part of our social existence and/or academic research. Irrespective of eye conditions, or the lack thereof, blindness is an understanding at which we have all come to arrive. On the way to this conceptual point, which is in any case unlikely ever to be fixed, we have passed or visited many formative cultural stations.
In the terms of autocritical disability studies (i.e. an explicitly embodied development of critical disability studies), these cultural stations include key moments in education and training; the reflective pursuits of philosophy, aesthetics, and cultural theory; literary works such as autobiography, novels, short stories, drama, and poetry; visual texts ranging from photography to postage stamps; technological developments like television, computer applications, and social media; value systems defined by family and/or religion; and the social phenomenon of hate and war. Each chapter in this volume engages with two of these cultural stations; some ostensibly if not profoundly positive or indeed negative and some that contradict each other within and across chapters.
This book will be of interest to all scholars and students of disability studies, sociology, education, and health.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

Cultural Stations of Blindness: From Ignorance to Understandings

part I|56 pages

The Directions and Redirections of Education

chapter 2|9 pages

From PowerPoint to Zoom

Interrogating the Gaze in Teaching at a Small South African University

chapter 3|12 pages

Blindness as a Social Construct in Cyprus

What Can We Learn From Cultural Events and Artefacts Aiming to Claim Rights, Celebrate, or Prevent Blindness?

chapter 4|12 pages

The Flag, a Rap, and the Ethnographer

Looking for ‘Indianness' Within Visual Impairment

chapter 5|11 pages

Blind Student as a Bypassed Reader

Analyzing Blindness in Required Reading for Schools in Poland

part II|64 pages

The Blind Reading the Blind

chapter 6|9 pages

From World War to Social Integration and Beyond

Experiences of Blindness in Twentieth-Century Italy

chapter 7|9 pages

A State of Spiritual Derangement

Blindness in Seventh-Day Adventist Theology, 1860s–1950s

chapter 8|10 pages

Faith Healing and Blindness Across Cultures

Disability, Religion, and the Scientific Milieu

chapter 9|13 pages

The Acceptance and Transcendence of Blindness

A Collaborative Autoethnography

chapter 10|10 pages

Encountering the Myth, Transforming Utopian Realities of Blindness

Counter Narrative Notes on Intersectional Interdependence and Critical Hermeneutics

chapter 11|11 pages

Crip Gazes

Eye Mutilations and the ‘Biopolitics of Debilitation' in Lina Meruane and Nicole Kramm

part III|59 pages

Stage and the Page

chapter 13|12 pages

Touching the Rock

Masculinity and Macular Degeneration

chapter 14|16 pages

Bringing a Brick to Market

Pedagogical Perspectives on the Discordant Interplay Between Critical and Cultural Stations of Blindness

chapter 15|10 pages

To Boldly Go Where No One (Sighted) Has Gone Before

Positive Portrayals of Blindness in Star Trek: TNG and H. G. Wells's ‘The Country of the Blind'

chapter 16|9 pages

Revisiting Ruins of Blindness

A Sketched Out Silhouette