Disability and social media : global perspectives

書誌事項

Disability and social media : global perspectives

edited by Katie Ellis and Mike Kent

(Interdisciplinary disability studies)

Routledge, 2017

  • : hbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Social media is popularly seen as an important media for people with disability in terms of communication, exchange and activism. These sites potentially increase both employment and leisure opportunities for one of the most traditionally isolated groups in society. However, the offline inaccessible environment has, to a certain degree, been replicated online and particularly in social networking sites. Social media is becoming an increasingly important part of our lives yet the impact on people with disabilities has gone largely unscrutinised. Similarly, while social media and disability are often both observed through a focus on the Western, developed and English-speaking world, different global perspectives are often overlooked. This collection explores the opportunities and challenges social media represents for the social inclusion of people with disabilities from a variety of different global perspectives that include Africa, Arabia and Asia along with European, American and Australasian perspectives and experiences.

目次

Contents Acknowledgements Chapter One: Introduction: Social Disability Part One: Advocacy Chapter Two: The Social Media and Deaf Empowerment. Polish Deaf Communities Online Fight for Representation (Magdalena Zdrodowska) Chapter Three: Personal reflections on the #107days campaign. Transformative, subversive or accidental? (Sara Ryan and George Julian) Chapter Four: Confirming Normalcy: 'Inspiration Porn' and the Construction of the Disabled Subject? (Beth Haller and Jeffrey Preston) Chapter Five: Bedding Out: art, activism and Twitter (Lucy Burke and Liz Crow) Part Two: Access Chapter Six: The growing importance of accessible social media (Scott Hollier) Chapter Seven: Transport mesadapte: Exploring online disability activism in Montreal (Laurence Parent and Marie-Eve Veilleux) Chapter Eight: Interactive inclusive - Designing tools for activism and empowerment (Tom Bieling, Tiago Martins and Gesche Joost) Chapter Nine: New Media and Accessible Emergency Communications: A United States-Based Meta Analysis (DeeDee Bennett, Helena Mitchell and Paul M. A. Baker) Part Three: Communications Chapter Ten: Social Media Use and Mediated Sociality Among Individuals with Communication Disabilities in the Digital Age (Meryl Alper and Beth Haller) Chapter Eleven: #socialconversations: disability representation and audio description on Marvel's Daredevil (Katie Ellis) Chapter Twelve: Articulating Vulnerability and Interdependence in Networked Social Space (Brian Goldfarb and John Armenta) Chapter Thirteen: Social media and disability inclusion: Critical reflections of a Zimbabwean activist (Kudzai Shava) Part Four: Education Chapter Fourteen: Opportunities for eLearning, social media and disability (Mike Kent) Chapter Fifteen: A Phenomenology of Media Making Experience: Disability Studies and Wearable Cameras (D. Andy Rice) Chapter Sixteen: Blackboard as in/accessible social media: Updating education, teaching and learning (Leanne McRae) Chapter Seventeen: Dyslexics 'Knowing How' to challenge 'Lexism' (Craig Collinson and Owen Barden) Part Five: Community Chapter Eighteen: 'Talking my language': The AthletesFirst project and the use of blogging in virtual disability sport communities (Andrea Bundon) Chapter Nineteen: Posting autism: Online self-representation strategies in Tistje, a Flemish blog on Living on the spectrum from the front row (Anneleen Masschelein and Leni Van Goidsenhoven) Chapter Twenty: From awareness to inclusion: Creating bridges with the disability community through social media and civil society in Japan (Muneo Kaigo) Part Six: New Directions Chapter Twenty one: Self-representation considerations for people who use augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and social media (Amanda Hynan, Janice Murray and Juliet Goldbart) Chapter Twenty two: Disability and discourse: An Arabian example (Najma Al Zidjaly) Chapter Twenty three: Using social media to advance the social rights of people with disability in China: The Beijing One Plus One Disabled Persons' Cultural Development Centre (Jian Xu, Mike Kent, Katie Ellis and He Zhang)

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