ABSTRACT

Re-Presenting Disability addresses issues surrounding disability representation in museums and galleries, a topic which is receiving much academic attention and is becoming an increasingly pressing issue for practitioners working in wide-ranging museums and related cultural organisations.

This volume of provocative and timely contributions, brings together twenty researchers, practitioners and academics from different disciplinary, institutional and cultural contexts to explore issues surrounding the cultural representation of disabled people and, more particularly, the inclusion (as well as the marked absence) of disability-related narratives in museum and gallery displays. The diverse perspectives featured in the book offer fresh ways of interrogating and understanding contemporary representational practices as well as illuminating existing, related debates concerning identity politics, social agency and organisational purposes and responsibilities, which have considerable currency within museums and museum studies.

Re-Presenting Disability explores such issues as:

  • In what ways have disabled people and disability-related topics historically been represented in the collections and displays of museums and galleries? How can newly emerging representational forms and practices be viewed in relation to these historical approaches?

  • How do emerging trends in museum practice – designed to counter prejudiced, stereotypical representations of disabled people – relate to broader developments in disability rights, debates in disability studies, as well as shifting interpretive practices in public history and mass media?

  • What approaches can be deployed to mine and interrogate existing collections in order to investigate histories of disability and disabled people and to identify material evidence that might be marshalled to play a part in countering prejudice? What are the implications of these developments for contemporary collecting?

  • How might such purposive displays be created and what dilemmas and challenges are curators, educators, designers and other actors in the exhibition-making process, likely to encounter along the way?

  • How do audiences – disabled and non-disabled – respond to and engage with interpretive interventions designed to confront, undercut or reshape dominant regimes of representation that underpin and inform contemporary attitudes to disability?

part I|111 pages

Part I New Ways of Seeing

chapter 1|20 pages

Activist Practice

chapter 2|18 pages

Picturing People with Disabilities

Classical portraiture as reconstructive narrative

chapter 3|12 pages

Agents at Angkor

chapter 4|11 pages

‘See No Evil'

chapter 5|15 pages

Ghosts in the War Museum

chapter 6|13 pages

Behind the Shadow of Merrick

chapter 7|20 pages

Disability Reframed

Challenging visitor perceptions in the museum

part 2|82 pages

Part 2 Interpretive Journeys and Experiments

chapter 8|15 pages

To Label the Label?

‘Learning disability' and exhibiting ‘critical proximity’

chapter 9|13 pages

Hurting and Healing

Reflections on representing experiences of mental illness in museums

chapter 10|12 pages

Histories of Disability and Medicine

Reconciling historical narratives and contemporary values

chapter 11|13 pages

Revealing Moments

Representations of disability and sexuality

chapter 13|16 pages

Face to Face

Representing facial disfigurement in a museum context

part 3|85 pages

Part 3 Unsettling Practices

chapter 14|16 pages

‘Out From Under'

A brief history of everything 1

chapter 15|15 pages

Transforming Practice

Disability perspectives and the museum

chapter 16|16 pages

Reciprocity, Accountability, Empowerment

Emancipatory principles and practices in the museum

chapter 17|13 pages

Disability, Human Rights and the Public Gaze

The Losheng Story Museum

chapter 18|12 pages

A Museum for All?

The Norwegian Museum of Deaf History and Culture

chapter 19|11 pages

Collective Bodies

What museums do for disability studies