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...
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 |
Similar Items
-
THE PORTRAYAL OF ENGLISH GENTLEMAN IN THE NINETEENTH CENTURY AS SEEN IN DICKENS’ GREAT EXPECTATIONS NOVEL
by: Fatimah Muhajir
Published: (2020-06-01) -
Readings for children in the Brazilian nineteenth century
by: Regina Zilberman
Published: (2016-12-01) -
American National Identity and Portrayal of the Russian Empire in The New York Times in the Late Nineteenth Century
by: Haylee Behrends
Published: (2022-06-01) -
Trading in Knowledge: The Irish Builder and Nineteenth-Century Journalism
by: Elizabeth Tilley
Published: (2005-01-01) -
Reading Christian scriptures: the nineteenth-century context
by: Starr, C
Published: (2007)