This article examines the changing material world of the visually impaired child and the ways in which this has been viewed and understood by scholars, philosophers, educators and other commentators over time. It describes and analyses tactile encounters as they have been planned for by educators, museum curators and others, from the Age of the Enlightenment until the present day. It takes as its starting point a recent blog that appeared online in 2011, which posted images from handling sessions for the visually impaired child, organized by John Alfred Charlton Deas from Sunderland Museum, England, between 1913-1926. It traces the provenance and development of ideas around ‘seeing through touch’, from the embossed books and maps and the pr...
Touch is gaining attention in sensory studies and in art practice where the over-emphasis on sight a...
Museums are predominantly a visual experience, and often lack tangible resources that reflect the br...
The present PhD aims at understanding how Visual Impaired (VI) children process the tactile pictures...
This article examines the changing material world of the visually impaired child and the ways in whi...
This article reflects upon a pilot project crafting textile samples/prototypes for people who are vi...
This article examines the philosophical, social and cultural roots of touch exhibitions in British m...
<p class="MsoNormal">When displayed in museum cabinets, tactile objects that were once used in the e...
Numerous museums and galleries now offer tactile opportunities as part of their access provision. Th...
This article corresponds to an essay reflective character, from the documentary review focused on ne...
International audienceVisually impaired people have for a long time been excluded from museum visits...
This article looks at a quite different form of mediation, a tactile book on the Parthenon Frieze fo...
In this paper we explore the relationship between eTextiles and touch-based interaction with regards...
AbstractThis article has as theme considerations for environmental perception of people with visual ...
International audienceIn this article, we aim to examine how blind people perceive and represent the...
The master's thesis is divided into two parts. The first set of the master's thesis comprises the th...
Touch is gaining attention in sensory studies and in art practice where the over-emphasis on sight a...
Museums are predominantly a visual experience, and often lack tangible resources that reflect the br...
The present PhD aims at understanding how Visual Impaired (VI) children process the tactile pictures...
This article examines the changing material world of the visually impaired child and the ways in whi...
This article reflects upon a pilot project crafting textile samples/prototypes for people who are vi...
This article examines the philosophical, social and cultural roots of touch exhibitions in British m...
<p class="MsoNormal">When displayed in museum cabinets, tactile objects that were once used in the e...
Numerous museums and galleries now offer tactile opportunities as part of their access provision. Th...
This article corresponds to an essay reflective character, from the documentary review focused on ne...
International audienceVisually impaired people have for a long time been excluded from museum visits...
This article looks at a quite different form of mediation, a tactile book on the Parthenon Frieze fo...
In this paper we explore the relationship between eTextiles and touch-based interaction with regards...
AbstractThis article has as theme considerations for environmental perception of people with visual ...
International audienceIn this article, we aim to examine how blind people perceive and represent the...
The master's thesis is divided into two parts. The first set of the master's thesis comprises the th...
Touch is gaining attention in sensory studies and in art practice where the over-emphasis on sight a...
Museums are predominantly a visual experience, and often lack tangible resources that reflect the br...
The present PhD aims at understanding how Visual Impaired (VI) children process the tactile pictures...