Showing posts with label disability. Show all posts
Showing posts with label disability. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Leslie Feinberg: telling stories through photos





Leslie is best known for Stone Butch Blues, a novel about queer folks in the 1950s and the struggles they faced, including constant violence and police brutality.

Leslie's body of work includes Transgender Warriors and Trans Liberation, two non-fiction books, and Drag King Dreams, a second novel.

Leslie, now dealing with a degenerative disease and also prompted by hir move from hir home of 17 years in Jersey City due to these health issues, has taken to documenting the world and telling stories through photographs. More about the photos in Feignberg's words:

"I lost the ability to visualize as a child, after being physically forced to stop using my left hand. Hard to imagine today, perhaps, that left-handedness in people was once considered a sign of "sinister" character.

As my ability to use my left hand withered, my ability to visualize waned. I lost all ability to close my eyes and "picture" anything in my mind: a copper penny, a lover's face. So leaving New York City, my home of more than 35 years, and Jersey City, where Minnie Bruce and I had made our home for so many years, presented me with an especially emotionally painful loss of memory--like an impending hard drive crash. In addition, I was coping with neuro-degenerative disease and its neuro-toxic byproducts.

With only days to relocate, I began taking photos with our little silver point-and-shoot, and continued to take thousands more in the months that followed as we moved to three more apartments and I traveled for care--a kind of geographic and emotional GPS of where I was and how I got here.

Working on so many visual images has had, I believe, a big impact on my brain, my memory storage and retrieval. My ability to visualize is coming back for the first time since childhood.

These photographs are the unexpected form and shape of my memory cabinet. They also reveal the geographic and social isolation of severe illness and resulting disabilities. This body of work reveals my inner struggle for articulation at a time when illness and disability--and discrimination and prejudice--were silencing my voice.

Taking photographs may be beyond me now, because of illness. If I can't take new photographs, I will work on narratives from my already existing photo cabinet of 10,000 photos. I will continue to try to organize a digital "struggle memory project" and publish photos online. And this fall and winter I hope to find support for a project focusing on the relationship of disability to technology."

via feministing and Leslie's flickr

Friday, November 20, 2009

Envisioning New Meanings of Disability and Difference: A Multimedia Exhibit




Envisioning New Meanings of Disability and Difference: A Multimedia Exhibit

A dynamic multimedia exhibit, “Envisioning New Meanings of Disability and Difference” puts forward ways of seeing disability and difference. Women with disabilities and physical differences use photography and digital stories to boldly present themselves in their own words and images.

All are welcome to attend the exhibit launch and reception on Wednesday, November 18 from 4 – 6 p.m. in the East Common Room of Hart House (7 Hart House Circle). The location is accessible and ASL interpretation will be available. Artists featured in the Envisioning exhibit will be on-hand to discuss their work.

The Envisioning exhibit is free of charge and will run from Tuesday, November 17 until Tuesday, December 1 from 7:30 a.m. until 11 p.m. in the Hart House Map Room. It is open to all members of the University of Toronto and general public.

For accessibility questions, contact Myra Lefkowitz, U of T Health and Well-being Programs and Services at myra.lefkowitz@utoronto.ca. For more information or to RSVP to the Nov. 18 launch, contact Erin Noble at erin.noble@utoronto.ca.

This exhibit is presented by University of Toronto’s Health and Well-being Programs and Services, in co-operation with Hart House and the Envisioning New Meanings Planning Committee, composed of U of T staff, faculty and students.


DATE: Public launch and reception - Wednesday, November 18, 4 – 6 p.m.
Exhibit on display from November 17 until December 1.