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Bypassing the Supercrip Trope in Documentary Representations of Blind Visual Artists.

Brylla, C., 2019. Bypassing the Supercrip Trope in Documentary Representations of Blind Visual Artists. Disability Studies Quarterly, 38 (3).

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DOI: 10.18061/dsq.v38i3.6485

Abstract

Mainstream narratives depicting blind people who create visual art have repeatedly used the supercrip trope. For a seeing audience this trope highlights an artist's extraordinary skill and perseverance in creating aesthetic artefacts despite lacking – what is presumed to be – the essential sensory input of sight. This type of representation fails to portray the diversity and complexity of individual character traits but conveniently places blindness at the story's center; this turns the artistic process into a simplistic manifestation of 'abnormality' and 'otherness'. My own documentary practice explores filmic strategies that bypass the supercrip trope by emphasizing the 'everydayness' of the artistic creation process. The aim is for a seeing audience to experience the creation process as an ordinary, everyday act – amongst many others – in which blindness is neither foregrounded nor 'backgrounded'. This is illustrated through discussion of my documentary The Terry Fragments (2018), a film that represents a blind artist's painting process through narrative fragments and the depiction of improvisation and failure. These strategies evoke the multi-layered and heterarchical plurality of everydayness, which potentially resists the formation of the supercrip trope. This method can be applied to a variety of disability contexts that are prone to perpetuating the supercrip stereotype.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1041-5718
Uncontrolled Keywords:film ; documentary ; disability ; blindness
Group:Faculty of Media & Communication
ID Code:33081
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:28 Nov 2019 15:32
Last Modified:14 Mar 2022 14:18

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