Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading

In this article, I examine images of blind people in nineteenth-century Europe and America, and question the ways in which shifting sensory hierarchies constituted the representation of blindness in this period. I focus particularly on images of blind people reading by touch, an activity that became...

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Main Author: Heather Tilley
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2018-09-01
Series:Disability Studies Quarterly
Online Access:http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6475
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spelling doaj-871bc9266a22484f83309d0fa7ffb2d72020-11-24T20:49:48ZengThe Ohio State University LibrariesDisability Studies Quarterly1041-57182159-83712018-09-0138310.18061/dsq.v38i3.64754063Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile ReadingHeather Tilley0Birkbeck, University of LondonIn this article, I examine images of blind people in nineteenth-century Europe and America, and question the ways in which shifting sensory hierarchies constituted the representation of blindness in this period. I focus particularly on images of blind people reading by touch, an activity that became a public symbol of the various initiatives and advancements in education and training that were celebrated by both blind and sighted spokespeople. My discussion is structured around institutionally- and individually-commissioned portraits and I distinguish between the different agendas shaping representations of blind people. These include instances where blind people's achievements are problematically displayed for sighted benefactors; as well as examples of blind people determining the compositional form and modes of circulation of their likenesses thus altering "key directions in figurative possibilities" (Snyder 173). Moreover, the portraits I consider demonstrate the multisensory status of images, alerting us to a nineteenth-century aesthetic that was shaped by touch as well as vision. I draw on sensory culture theory to argue that attending to the experience and representation of the haptic in the circulation of visual images of blind people signals a participatory beholding, via which blindness is creatively – rather than critically – engaged.http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6475
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather Tilley
spellingShingle Heather Tilley
Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
Disability Studies Quarterly
author_facet Heather Tilley
author_sort Heather Tilley
title Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
title_short Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
title_full Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
title_fullStr Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
title_full_unstemmed Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading
title_sort portraying blindness: nineteenth-century images of tactile reading
publisher The Ohio State University Libraries
series Disability Studies Quarterly
issn 1041-5718
2159-8371
publishDate 2018-09-01
description In this article, I examine images of blind people in nineteenth-century Europe and America, and question the ways in which shifting sensory hierarchies constituted the representation of blindness in this period. I focus particularly on images of blind people reading by touch, an activity that became a public symbol of the various initiatives and advancements in education and training that were celebrated by both blind and sighted spokespeople. My discussion is structured around institutionally- and individually-commissioned portraits and I distinguish between the different agendas shaping representations of blind people. These include instances where blind people's achievements are problematically displayed for sighted benefactors; as well as examples of blind people determining the compositional form and modes of circulation of their likenesses thus altering "key directions in figurative possibilities" (Snyder 173). Moreover, the portraits I consider demonstrate the multisensory status of images, alerting us to a nineteenth-century aesthetic that was shaped by touch as well as vision. I draw on sensory culture theory to argue that attending to the experience and representation of the haptic in the circulation of visual images of blind people signals a participatory beholding, via which blindness is creatively – rather than critically – engaged.
url http://dsq-sds.org/article/view/6475
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