What We Aren’t Seeing Exclusionary Practices in Visual Media
Author(s)
Smith, Kai Alexis; Malinowski, Christine
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Disability in visual culture is arguably flawed, with ideas and concepts created and
accepted in the vacuum of ableist, capitalist environments. “Disability has always been
part of the human condition,” write art historians Keri Watson and Jo Mann. “Through-
out history, people with disabilities have often served as visual and cultural objects,
rather than as active participants in and creators of culture and media.”1 Mimi Ọnụọha,
Catherine D’Ignazio, Lauren Klein, and other scholars establish that visual media have
the power to communicate injustices, evoke uncomfortably necessary conversations, and
raise the volume on silenced voices.2 Recent scholarship and strategies have focused on
visual media under the lens of misinformation and misrepresentation with the aim of
training visual consumers’ palates to distinguish propaganda from critical discourse.3
Missing from this mainstream dialogue is that visuals can be equally exclusionary and
harmful to persons with disabilities.
Information educators play a role in disrupting the assumed perceptions around
disability and can challenge situations where common remediations fall short, where
barriers are introduced, and where damaging stereotypes are perpetuated.
Date issued
2024-01-03Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. LibrariesPublisher
ACRL
Citation
Smith, K. A., & Malinowski, C. (2024). What We Aren’t Seeing Exclusionary Practices in Visual Media. In Unframing the Visual: Visual Literacy Pedagogy in Academic Libraries and Information Spaces | ALA Store (2023951570; p. 327-345). ACRL. https://www.alastore.ala.org/content/unframing-visual-visual-literacy-pedagogy-academic-libraries-and-information-spaces
Other identifiers
2023951570
Keywords
Disability, Visual Literary, Visual culture, Visual Media, Exclusion, Accessible design, Critical Race Theory, Ableism, Inclusive design, Intersectionality, Disability Justice, Universal Design for Learning, ACRL Framework for Visual Literacy
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