Disabling imagery - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Disabling imagery

Description:

Disciplinary power emerged in the eighteenth century, when disciplinary ... Bethan's Panopticon: a structure that would make it possible for a single gaze ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:81
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: wayne99
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Disabling imagery


1
Disabling imagery
  • Images as disciplinary power

2
'Disciplinary power' and the 'disciplinary gaze'
(Foucault, 1977).
  • Disciplinary power emerged in the eighteenth
    century, when disciplinary techniques 'crossed
    the technological threshold' and became
    instruments of a new kind of power (Foucault,
    1977 224).
  • As a technique of power, it is quite distinct
    from 'the majestic rituals of sovereignty or the
    great apparatus of the state' (Foucault, 1977
    170).

3
The three silent mechanisms of the gaze
  • Three 'simple instruments' of disciplinary power
    'hierarchical observation, normalizing judgement
    and their combination in a procedure that is
    specific to it, the examination' (Foucault, 1977
    170).

4
Images of disability as hierarchical observation
  • Bethans Panopticon a structure that would make
    it possible for a single gaze to see everything
    constantly a perfect eye that nothing would
    escape the centre towards which all gazes would
    be turned (Foucault, 1977 173).
  • The unified disciplinary gaze traverses all
    points and supervises every instant' (Foucault,
    1977 183).

5
Images as normalising judgements the
disciplinary image
  • Disciplinary power acts upon individuals to
    ensure they are trained or corrected,
    classified, normalised, excluded etc. (Foucault,
    1977 191).
  • It is a force that acts by measuring in
    quantitative terms and hierarchies in terms of
    value the abilities, the level, the 'nature' of
    individuals and, using this information,
    introduces the constraint of a conformity that
    must be achieved (Foucault, 1977 183).

6
Normalisation and attention
  • All the time that the ends of our practice are
    (mis)informed by unexamined notions of
    normality, we can but find ourselves
    sauntering through our professional lives, only
    half-awake to their richness and complexity
    (Barton Corbett, 1993 15).

7
Images as a mechanism of examination
  • The examination is a mechanism of
    objectification, the examination is, as it
    were, the ceremony of this objectification
    (Foucault 1977 187).

8
Disciplinary images of disability
  • Prejudice is not just interpersonal between the
    abled and the dis-abled but is also implicit in
    cultural representations of persons with
    impairments (Shakespeare, 1994).
  • Prejudice is a form of disciplinary power
  • Prejudice can be as powerfully disabling as any
    social structure.

9
Barnes (1992) on categories of disciplinary images
  • Category One The Tragic conception of Disability
  • Category Two The Disabled Person as Sinister and
    Evil
  • Category Three The Disabled Person with super
    human abilities
  • Category Four The Disabled Person as an Object
    of Ridicule
  • Category five The Disabled Person as Incapable
    of Participating Fully in Community Life
  • Category six Positive Images of disability

10
Category 1 The Tragic conception of Disability
  • The pitiful disabled characters initially evoke
    hostile feelings because they have come to
    represent experiences such as vulnerability and
    dependency which have been repressed in the
    spectator. These hostile feelings are then
    quickly transformed into guilt and attempts to
    secure forgiveness.
  • (Marks, 1999166-67)

11
Posters for a drugs company
12
(No Transcript)
13
Category Two The Disabled Person as Sinister and
Evil
  • This distortion of the experience of disability
    is present in a great deal of literature and art,
    both classical and popular, and continues to be
    produced today.
  • (Barnes, 1992)

14
(No Transcript)
15
Schizoid (1972) The Warning Not Recommended
Viewing for Persons with Schizophrenic
Tendencies!
16
(No Transcript)
17
Category Three The Disabled Person as a person
with super human abilities
  • ... by flaunting normal accomplishments as
    extraordinary, by hailing people with
    disabilities as human wonders, aggrandized
    presentations probably taught the lesson that
    achievement for people with differences was
    unusual rather than common.
  • (Bogdan, 1988 279).
  • They make overcoming disability the
    responsibility of the disabled person.
  • Barnes (1992) these images can result in them
    the disabled being denied essential services.

18
(No Transcript)
19
Category Four The Disabled Person as an Object
of Ridicule
  • Toni Morrison (1993/1997 270) 'lethal
    discourses of exclusion blocking access to
    cognition for both the excluder and the
    excluded'.
  • Lethal because they are so few positive images to
    contradict them (Shakespeare, 1999).

The Trentonian (New Jersey), July 10th, 2002
20
Category five The Disabled Person as incapable
of inclusion in community life
  • The disabled amount to just 1.5 of all
    characters portrayed in TV films and dramas
    (Cumberbatch Negrine,1992)
  • In contrast, Government evidence reveals that at
    least 12 of the British population are disabled
    people (Barnes, 1992).

21
Warned New Yorkers to beware of a terrifying new
crime wave In our newfound complacency, we have
forgotten a particular kind of violence to which
we are still prey. The violence of the
mentally-ill.
22
Poster for a drug company
23
Category six Positive Images of disability
  • Ideas?
  • Excellent websites
  • http//www.disability-archive.leeds.ac.uk/
  • http//www.cinemaniastigma.com/pages/1/index.htm
  • http//www.bfi.org.uk/education/resources/teaching
    /disability/guide.html

24
References
  • Barnes, C. (1992) Disabling Imagery and the
    Media An Exploration of the Principles for Media
    Representations of Disabled People
  • Barton, L. Corbett, J. (1993) Special needs in
    further education the challenge of inclusive
    provision, European Journal of Special Needs
    Education, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp.14-22
  • Bogdan, R. (1988) Freak show presenting human
    oddities for amusement and profit (Chicago The
    University of Chicago Press)
  • Cumberbatch, G. Negrine, R. (1992) Images of
    Disability on Television (London, Routledge)
  • Foucault, M. (1977) Discipline and Punish The
    Birth of the Prison (Trans. by A. Sheridan,
    Harmondsworth Penguin Books)

25
  • Oliver, M. and Barnes, C. (1998) Disabled People
    and Social Policy From Exclusion to Inclusion,
    Harlow, Addison Wesley Longman.
  • Marks , D. (1999) Disability Controversial
    debates and psychological perspectives (London
    Rutledge)
  • Shakespeare. T. (1994) Cultural Representation of
    Disabled People Dustbins for Disavowal? Online
    http//www.leeds.ac.uk/disabilitystudies/archiveuk
    /archframe.htm 22/09/04
  • Shakespeare, T. (1999) Art and lies?
    Representations of disability on film, In M.
    Corker S. French (Eds) Disability Discourse
    (Philadelphia Open University Press)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com