In response to Ben-Moshe's highly engaging examination of Saramago's Blindness and the novel's use of disability as metaphor, I explore the possibility that this novel serves primarily as an indictment of the cultural imperialism of sightedness. Although the novel can certainly be read as an ableist text, I suggest that it might also serve to expose the creation of blindness as a disability through structures of power and domination
As a representation of blindness, Maurice Maeterlinck’s The Blind is highly problematic and becomes ...
This dissertation engages the cultural meanings and movements of blindness from a dramaturgically in...
Our book examines the role of three factors, God, Money, and Politics, in the epistemological theory...
What are the implications of teaching disability as a pure metaphor? Disability often has negative c...
English Department Honors Thesis.Blindness plays a prominent role in literature and is frequently tu...
Although the theme of blindness occurs frequently in literature, literary criticism has rarely engag...
This thesis is in two parts. The first part is a critical review of some contemporary writing, on th...
"Infusing Disability in the Curriculum: The Case of Saramago's Blindness" aims for a conversation wi...
This chapter explores the potential for disability studies to counter the ongoing marginalisation of...
Saramago, Nobel prize for literature, places us on a stage, in which a group of human beings is conf...
This thesis discusses the Setting in the novel Blindness. In this thesis the writer proposes two res...
This edited volume explores blindness as a construct with which we the contributors engage as part o...
The portrayal of blindness in Western culture has largely constituted of stereotypical representatio...
The portrayal of blindness in Western culture has largely constituted of stereotypical representatio...
In Blindness, Nobel Prize laureate Jos6 Saramago chronicles the quarantining of the first victims of...
As a representation of blindness, Maurice Maeterlinck’s The Blind is highly problematic and becomes ...
This dissertation engages the cultural meanings and movements of blindness from a dramaturgically in...
Our book examines the role of three factors, God, Money, and Politics, in the epistemological theory...
What are the implications of teaching disability as a pure metaphor? Disability often has negative c...
English Department Honors Thesis.Blindness plays a prominent role in literature and is frequently tu...
Although the theme of blindness occurs frequently in literature, literary criticism has rarely engag...
This thesis is in two parts. The first part is a critical review of some contemporary writing, on th...
"Infusing Disability in the Curriculum: The Case of Saramago's Blindness" aims for a conversation wi...
This chapter explores the potential for disability studies to counter the ongoing marginalisation of...
Saramago, Nobel prize for literature, places us on a stage, in which a group of human beings is conf...
This thesis discusses the Setting in the novel Blindness. In this thesis the writer proposes two res...
This edited volume explores blindness as a construct with which we the contributors engage as part o...
The portrayal of blindness in Western culture has largely constituted of stereotypical representatio...
The portrayal of blindness in Western culture has largely constituted of stereotypical representatio...
In Blindness, Nobel Prize laureate Jos6 Saramago chronicles the quarantining of the first victims of...
As a representation of blindness, Maurice Maeterlinck’s The Blind is highly problematic and becomes ...
This dissertation engages the cultural meanings and movements of blindness from a dramaturgically in...
Our book examines the role of three factors, God, Money, and Politics, in the epistemological theory...