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Indoor environment

aquato's picture

I chose to stay inside because the weather was terrible and I doubt anybody wanted to sit on wet leaves. I guess part of it is that we were in Jodie's room for a while this time, too, so that's a different environment in itself. I think we worked pretty ok in there, it's just another room; people weren't too distracted in there. Certain people talked more than others since we were in a different group, I think. We got more lively after coming back to our room.

my thoughts on feminism and Ifemelu

ndifrank's picture

When thinking of various categories of feminism and Americanah, I find myself wanting to label Ifemelu as a feminist. Yet, when I try to pick which category she would fall into I have hard deciphering if she is purely on category. I think about Adichie's tedx talk and quote used in flawless, the simple definition she gave for what constitutes a feminist. In some aspect I agree that as long as you believe in the social and political equality of the sexes than you are a feminist yet, I have a personal dificulty with both making feminist a broad title or by doing the opposite and catorgorizing feminism.

(rather long) summary of My body, My Closet:Invisible disability and the limits of coming out by Ellen Samuels

ndifrank's picture

Ellen Samuels sets out to " queer disability".  Critques Swains idea that homosexuality and disability in general have a lot in common because people  from either or both communities experience a coming out process in that society assumes that everyone is straight and able bodied until told otherwise. Samuels find that Swain' and Cameron's anaolgy is that "coming out" is implied to be a single event when it may be an action, self acceptance, or political shift. Samuels talks about how people with non visable disabilities and non heterosexual people both share the ability to "pass". There is a privilege that people with non visable disabilities have because of their ability to be able to assimulate.

Crip time in practice

abby rose's picture

The more I learn about crip time, the more necessary it seems to practice. Yet I struggle to understand how exactly society (on a larger scale) could actually crip time. Our 360 saw crip time in action at Camphill, where time was incredibly flexible and flowed at a slower place. There were also (seemingly) no expectations as to how people lived their lives over the years: no expectations to have children, find a spouse, buy a home, etc. It was almost as if time was paused at Camphill, or at least normative time. But how realistic is it to carry crip time into larger societies?

Time for Disability Studies and a Future for Crips

abby rose's picture

Disability is highly linked to temporality. For one, "the abled/disabled distinction is neither permanent nor impermeable" (25). People shift in and out of disability over time, and there is no person that is untouched by it. Secondly, disability can distort people's perceptions of time thus affecting their ability to operate within our normative confines of time. Furthermore, disability calls for a flexibility in time whether it be for delays with transportation, mental or physical state, interactions with others or the environment, etc.

Invisibility of Identity

abradycole's picture

Samuel’s essay discusses similarities and differences between non-normative identities. She compares lesbians who present femininely as people with an invisible impairment similar to people with invisible disabilities. One major similarity is the shared trade off of being able to fly under the radar without regular discrimination while also having a harder time joining communities of people with the same identity. Samuel discusses the pressure to prove to the world that you fit into an identity when it’s not immediately clear, and the privilege that comes with not having to prove yourself as anything. She also discusses the act of coming out as anything but an assumed normative identity as a continuous process rather than a static and singular event that takes place and ends. 

Work v. Portrait Work: How intent affects impact of visual representation

Hummingbird's picture

Laura Swanson’s photography plays with the history of portrait photography and disrupts the viewer’s expectations of how to interact with portrait photographs. To explore this, I look at two very different examples of her work: the first is part of her “Anti-Self-Portraits” series, and the second is part of her series of Bryn Mawr and Haverford students following her work on the two campuses two years ago. I argue that the different goals for each series and the different subject matter impact how each may be read, and highlight the ways photographic portraiture has been used to represent people.