People who lack part(s) of their face have a visibly different appearance both due to their facial difference itself and the medical aids that they use to cover it (e.g. prostheses, bandages). In this article, we draw on interviews with affected individuals in order to investigate how visible difference features in their everyday experience. The visibility of their facial difference, we show, comes into play as they interact with various others in the contexts of their daily life. However, respondents’ visibility manifests in different ways, depending on whether they cover or uncover their facial difference. These different modes of visibility make for distinct ‘visibility experiences’, as participants meet others who notice–or fail to noti...
Previous research has found that people with visible differences are granted more physical space tha...
One in five people have an appearance that is considered 'different' to the normal population. This ...
People with visible facial difference often experience other people reacting negatively to their app...
People who lack part(s) of their face have a visibly different appearance both due to their facial d...
What is it like to live with a facial disfigurement? Gili Yaron researched this question from an emp...
Disability studies as an academic field has long sought to highlight the lived experiences of people...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
yesThe face is not the property of an individual; it is a key part of our communicating body. It is...
This study explored the psychosocial experiences of living with a visible difference and social supp...
Many health conditions impact upon an individual’s appearance and result in an altered appearance (“...
What is it like to live with a facial disfigurement? Gili Yaron researched this question from an emp...
Previous research has found that people with visible differences are granted more physical space tha...
One in five people have an appearance that is considered 'different' to the normal population. This ...
People with visible facial difference often experience other people reacting negatively to their app...
People who lack part(s) of their face have a visibly different appearance both due to their facial d...
What is it like to live with a facial disfigurement? Gili Yaron researched this question from an emp...
Disability studies as an academic field has long sought to highlight the lived experiences of people...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
In recent years, facial difference is increasingly on the public and academic agenda. This is eviden...
yesThe face is not the property of an individual; it is a key part of our communicating body. It is...
This study explored the psychosocial experiences of living with a visible difference and social supp...
Many health conditions impact upon an individual’s appearance and result in an altered appearance (“...
What is it like to live with a facial disfigurement? Gili Yaron researched this question from an emp...
Previous research has found that people with visible differences are granted more physical space tha...
One in five people have an appearance that is considered 'different' to the normal population. This ...
People with visible facial difference often experience other people reacting negatively to their app...