Shifting Perception: Photographing Disabled People During the Civil Rights Era

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2014
Authors
Hiles, Timothy W.
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University of Hawaii at Manoa -- Center on Disability Studies
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During the American Civil Rights Era, photographic perception of disabled people shifted from constructs that empowered the abled “normal” to an empathetic awareness of social isolation and enfreakment. Through rhetorics of the stare, photographers demonstrated increased cognizance of what it meant to be an “other” in a society that valued homogeneity.
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art history, enfreakment, “other”
Citation
Hiles, T. W. (2014). Shifting Perception: Photographing Disabled People During the Civil Rights Era. Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal, 10(3 & 4).
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