Interests within Making Fashion Accessible
Demystifying Disability: What to Know, What to Say, and How to be an Ally by Emily Ladau
intro, chap 1 and 2
Summary
The introduction, chapter 1, and 2 of Demystifying Disability by Emily Ladau describe the diversity within disability and point to the roots of different language choices, highlighting that disability is a human experience in nature, discussing in what ways it creates identi and how it has found its way into metaphors and daily language, creating more stigma.
One Takeaway
Language has power. Etymology tells all sorts of interesting stories.
Disability is often taboo. Those on the outskirts fear asking questions, and therefore it doesnât become normalised or understood. It being taboo or avoided in language creates a strangeness around the topic that does far less for the people itâs trying to protect.
Useful language includes disability community, used by the author with the disclaimer that it comes in all shapes and sizes. Handicapped is outdated and restrictive terminology - Accessible instead to refer to the physical realm. Identity-first language to bind a community in a helpful way (with capital A for Autistic person) and person-first language (âperson with..â or âwho hasâ). Referring to assistive equipment like something that enables a part of life that is otherwise dampened, as opposed to using language to focus on what is âmissingâ.
Connection to Real-world Example
In my own thinking, I often feel two forces at odds. Iâd say I have bottom-up thinking, considering all the issues with something and making sure to understand the system rather than launching into depth on one use case. Capitalistic forces drive us to create one use case or persona to appeal to the masses.
Burning question
Personalisation and how can it become part of whatâs considered a sustainable business model. Artificial Intelligence or a new ID card may have a role here - for example, if people carry a flash drive or an NFC tag with their preferences the same way they carry an ID. It would be more descriptive and bring the invisible to the visible, and make intersectionality more digestible to data systems that will otherwise be making decisions for us whether people like it or not. so how do we codify these portions of identity?
The core question, as I see it, is around what the features that describe a human? And what are some Iâm not aware of?
Something I think of quite often is how in Europe

DISABILITY COMMUNITY REFLECTION ASSIGNMENT
- A description of the organization they interacted with
- A description of the event, or what they did as a volunteer
- Reflection on the impact of this experience in terms of their understanding of Disability and Accessibility culture
check my events list