Re-Imagining Accessibility
Re-imagining accessibility through the transformations of culture -- particularly the transformative promise of accessible technology for people with disabilities -- is the work of the Fair Use Lab. What does Shepard Fairey’s Hope poster have to do with accessibility? Read more: Shape-Shifters in the Fair Use Lab [MiT6 2009]
Remix: Danger Mouse
Will DJ Danger Mouse become the Che Guevara of digital sampling? Consider the case for fair use made by The Grey Album.Blind Photographers
In the moment when Paul Strand photographed her surreptitiously on the street in New York, the social engineers who created a system for licensing beggars never imagined that a blind woman had culture or could make culture. She herself may not have imagined it. Paul Strand probably didn’t give her much credit for making culture, either. Read more: Curiosity & The Blind Photographer [MiT5 2007] See more on blind photographers.Disability As Praxis
I am a parent, homeowner, knowledge worker, and person with disabilities. Oppression is not my true word, but praxis is. In Paulo Freire’s transformative work, I find an affirmation deeper than ideology or political activism -- an affirmation of the dynamic role of disability in culture. I believe the daily praxis of making adaptations and negotiating accommodations represents a significant form of cultural production. Read Disability As Praxis.ADA 20th Anniversary
On its 20th anniversary, pundits will debate what the Americans with Disabilities Act has accomplished. I still believe what I said in a TV interview after the ADA signing ceremony in 1990. “The ADA will not end disability discrimination overnight. But in a nation governed by the rule of law, getting it in writing is the place to start.” So what is the ADA's legacy? A Generation of Problem-Solvers.
a blind flaneur
Category Archives: accessibility
Will Obama Sacrifice Blind Readers to the Content Industry’s Agenda?
In a recent column in the Financial Times, James Boyle assesses the Obama administration’s initial record in the copyright/intellectual property arena and finds it to be business as usual. He concludes his argument with the example of accessibility for blind … Continue reading
A ‘Public Sphere’ Argument for Accessibility
When I heard the word “readable” in the following quote from the Personal Democracy Forum, I immediately read into it “accessible” for blind readers. Via Eric Kuhn: TwitNotes from #PDF09: Andrew Rasiej: Public should be redefined as being searchable and … Continue reading
Posted in accessibility, Government 2.0
Tagged #gov20, #pdf09, accessibility, public sphere
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It’s Helen Keller Day in Second Life
Virtual guide dog Max with new friends in Second Life. [Image source: Robin Roar/Flickr] See Helen Keller Day Flickr pool. Via Helen Keller Day – Second Life Wiki. Virtual Helping Hands and a coalition of community volunteers are proud to … Continue reading
GAO Report on Voting Accessibility
The U.S. Government Accountability Office(GAO) issued a report to Congress on voting accessibility. In “Voters With Disabilities: More Polling Places Had No Potential Impediments Than in 2000, but Challenges Remain” (GAO-09-685), the GAO found: We found that, compared to 2000, … Continue reading
Who Will Write The History of Accessible Technology?
I’d like to see an extension of the Poynter Timeline documenting the parallel development of computer-based information accessibility. Here are several of my milestones: 1976: The first time I heard about CCTV reading systems for visually impaired people. It wasn’t … Continue reading
Posted in accessibility, media studies
Tagged accessibility, journalism, media studies, technology
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