Who Has the Right to Say What the Body Means? by Raphael Raphael, RDS Associate Editor for Multimedia
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| 'Capital Crawl,' Tom Olin, from 'Art of the Lived Experience' |
Who has the right to say what the body means? This is one of the questions those concerned with the power of media – and of access to media – frequently consider. The multiple forms of media (traditional and new) that we experience can have a profound influence on how we consider the body. Those myriad voices frequently dictate (or try to dictate) what we as communities believe it means to be beautiful, what it means to be a man, what it means to be a woman, what it means to be “normal,” even what it means to be human. Increasingly democratic possibilities of new media and media distribution have given forum to many new voices to give their own take on these questions. There have increasingly been more ways to expand and interrogate sacred notions of the body, whether the sacred cultural scripts of gender, race, or those of what it means to have a disability.
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| Mat Fraser in 'In Water I'm Weightless' |
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| Liz Crow in 'Bedding Out" |
Aloha,
Raphael Raphael
Athens, Greece
May 20th, 2015
rraphael@hawaii.edu
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