Description
The dignity of cognitively disabled people and the ethics of representing their lives are at the heart of an extraordinary yet little-known book first published in the former German Democratic Republic. Was fur eine Insel in was fur einem Meer, or What Kind of Island in What Kind of Sea (Rostock, Hinstorff, 1986) depicts residents of a church-run institution for people with cognitive disabilities in astonishing black-and-white photographs by Dietmar Riemann and in a probing, poignant essay by esteemed German writer Franz Fuhmann. This important text, which moved from a medical model to a historical and cultural view of disability as an aspect of human identity and experience, is translated into English for the first time by Elizabeth Hamilton and includes reflections on the book and its impact. As fuller, global histories of disability are now being written, What Kind of Island in What Kind of Sea opens an essential window onto a formerly shuttered world, demonstrating the power of the arts to hone our capacity to perceive and appreciate human difference.
About the Author
Elizabeth C. Hamilton is Associate Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Oberlin College and Associate Professor of German. Her scholarly and teaching interests center on disability as a lived experience and on cultural representations of disability, Universal Design in pedagogy, accessibility in higher education, and on East German literature and film.
Franz Fuhmann (1922-1984) was an East German writer who published poetry, translations, essays, stories, and books for children and adults.
Dietmar Riemann (1950-) is a German photographer and author.
Reviews
"What Kind of Island in What Kind of Sea is a small book but an important and an impressive one. It is a key document for future research into disability history that still needs to be studied in much more detail."
* H-Disability *Book Information
ISBN 9781643150277
Author Franz Fuhmann
Format Paperback
Page Count 218
Imprint Lever Press
Publisher Michigan Publishing Services