Designing Disability: Symbols, Space, and Society
Autor Elizabeth Guffeyen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 oct 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350148833
ISBN-10: 1350148830
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 75 BW illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350148830
Pagini: 240
Ilustrații: 75 BW illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 mm
Greutate: 0.41 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Guffey provides a unique design history of the wheelchair and the international symbol of access (ISA) in the context of changing social attitudes to people with disabilities.
Notă biografică
Elizabeth Guffey is Professor of Art and Design History and directs the MA in Modern and Contemporary Art, Criticism and Theory at the State University of New York, Purchase, USA. She was a founding editor of the journal Design and Culture, and is the author of books including Retro: The Culture of Revival (2013) and Posters: A Global History (2015).
Cuprins
AcknowledgmentsIllustrationsIntroduction: Disability By Design? Design's MisfitDefining DisabilityDefining a SymbolPART ONE: History of an Idea: Access (- 1961) Origins of a Misfit Design: The Advent of the ModernWheelchair (- 1945)An Environmental MisfitA Symbol of Defeat?How to Behave in a Bath-ChairThe Chair That Changed the WorldFitting In (1945 - 1961)Accessing a Culture on Four WheelsThe Nugent EthicAn Attack on Barriers PART TWO: Redesigning Signs and Space (1961 - 1974)The Personal Politics of Signs (1961 - 1965)What a Good Sign Can DoDown the "Welfare Path"The Ideologies of "Self-Help" and "Social Welfare Cultures"Breaking BarriersSigns of Discrimination (1965 - 1968)The Secret Signs of Disabled PeoplePositive Discrimination and the Psychology of DisablementTowards s Universal SignA Design for the Real World? (1968 - 1974)A Technical AidMan and The EnvironmentA Misfit HeadA Positive Step ForwardPART THREE: A Mark of Identity? (1974 - Today) Signs of Protest (1974 - 1990)"The Selma of Handicapped Rights"Rights and ProtestPassing the ADA: Compliance and DefianceA Critical Design? (1990 - Today)A Cry for HelpA 21st Century MakeoverEpilogue: The Beginning of the End?Bibliography
Recenzii
Erudite, accessible, and with an impressive breadth of reference, this engaging and highly readable book offers fresh historical and cultural perspectives on the fit/misfit binary. Focussing on how design both creates and responds to different notions of disability, it gives an at times fascinating alternative history of activism and identity through the study of the ISA - the International Symbol of Access.
Elizabeth Guffey's search for the origins of the International Symbol of Access takes her on an unexpected path, discovering not only the history of the modern wheelchair but a new perspective on disability at the intersection of design, the body and space. and most readers will delight in following her quest.
Informed and erudite, Designing Disability shows how the analysis of a single symbol can act as a gateway to discussions of disability theory and history. Elizabeth Guffey's critical insight augments and develops our understandings of disability experiences and subjectivities.
From the invention of the modern wheel chair and early critiques of disabling design conventions, Guffey makes a history of the international symbol of access come alive. An original and insightful analysis that furthers our understanding of both the symbol's history and associated access debates. This book will appeal to appeal to students and academics across a range of disciplines, shedding further light not only on a symbol and its history, but also how disability continues to be socially produced.
Design Incubation is excited to announce Elizabeth Guffey's latest book published by Bloomsbury Publishing, titled Designing Disability: Symbols, Space, and Society. This book describes the development of disability as an idea. Disability, accessibility, its institutionalization, acceptance, and integration is considered within the context of design history.
I encourage anyone to read this important book... it should catalyse reflection and discussion about the implications for disabled people and non-disabled people, designers and design-and provoke new directions in disability-led design.
The strength of Designing Disability is the way significant moments in the history of access and disability are woven together with society's perception and the design of a universal icon ... It is an impressively researched and thought-provoking text that leaves the reader wanting to closely follow the shifting social construct as history continues to unfold.
Elizabeth Guffey's search for the origins of the International Symbol of Access takes her on an unexpected path, discovering not only the history of the modern wheelchair but a new perspective on disability at the intersection of design, the body and space. and most readers will delight in following her quest.
Informed and erudite, Designing Disability shows how the analysis of a single symbol can act as a gateway to discussions of disability theory and history. Elizabeth Guffey's critical insight augments and develops our understandings of disability experiences and subjectivities.
From the invention of the modern wheel chair and early critiques of disabling design conventions, Guffey makes a history of the international symbol of access come alive. An original and insightful analysis that furthers our understanding of both the symbol's history and associated access debates. This book will appeal to appeal to students and academics across a range of disciplines, shedding further light not only on a symbol and its history, but also how disability continues to be socially produced.
Design Incubation is excited to announce Elizabeth Guffey's latest book published by Bloomsbury Publishing, titled Designing Disability: Symbols, Space, and Society. This book describes the development of disability as an idea. Disability, accessibility, its institutionalization, acceptance, and integration is considered within the context of design history.
I encourage anyone to read this important book... it should catalyse reflection and discussion about the implications for disabled people and non-disabled people, designers and design-and provoke new directions in disability-led design.
The strength of Designing Disability is the way significant moments in the history of access and disability are woven together with society's perception and the design of a universal icon ... It is an impressively researched and thought-provoking text that leaves the reader wanting to closely follow the shifting social construct as history continues to unfold.