Ebook: Designing Disability: Symbols, Space, and Society
Author: Elizabeth Guffey
- Tags: Architecture, Buildings, Criticism, Decoration & Ornament, Drafting & Presentation, Historic Preservation, History, Individual Architects & Firms, Interior Design, Landscape, Project Planning & Management, Regional, Security Design, Sustainability & Green Design, Urban & Land Use Planning, Vernacular, Arts & Photography, Design History & Criticism, Decorative Arts & Design, Arts & Photography, Techniques, Use of Color, Use of Ornament, Graphic Design, Arts & Photography, Architecture, Humanities, New Used & Rental Textbo
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
- Language: English
- pdf
Infirmity and illness may be seen as part of human experience, but 'disability' is a social construct, a way of thinking about and responding to a natural human condition. Elizabeth Guffey's highly original and wide-ranging study considers the period both before and after the introduction of the ISA, tracing the design history of the wheelchair, a product which revolutionised the mobility needs of many disabled people from the 1930s onwards. She also examines the rise of 'barrier-free architecture' in the reception of the ISA, and explores how the symbol became widely adopted and even a mark of identity for some, especially within the Disability Rights Movement.
Yet despite the social progress which is inextricably linked to the ISA, a growing debate has unfurled around the symbol and its meanings. The most vigorous critiques today have involved guerrilla art, graffiti and studio practice, reflecting new challenges to the relationship between design and disability in the twenty-first century.