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Conference Paper: The quest to being recognized as a valued person: First-person account of ecological approach to inaccessibility of arts and cultural activities

TitleThe quest to being recognized as a valued person: First-person account of ecological approach to inaccessibility of arts and cultural activities
Authors
Keywordspeople with disability
accessibility
ableism
human rights
ecological model
Issue Date2021
Citation
The 36th Annual Pacific Rim International Conference on Disability & Diversity: INNOVATE (PacRim 2021), Virtual Conference, Hawaii, USA, 1-2 March 2021 How to Cite?
AbstractArts and cultural activities enable body-mind rejuvenation, representation and appreciation of our surroundings. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) Article 9 clearly asserts the significance of ensuring accessibility, and the Article 30 recognizes the right of people with disability to participate in arts and cultural activities on equal basis with others. However, fundamental choices and opportunities for people with disability in arts and cultural activities are still seriously denied under the ableist culture. At the most basic level, “accessibility” plays a significant role in determining whether people with disability can literally “join” the arts and cultural activities. Going to concerts is a common example of participation in arts and cultural activities. As a wheelchair user with congenital muscular dystrophy and an enthusiastic concert-goer, I observe that the access to concerts has been greatly improved throughout the years, but the user experiences are often stigmatizing which reflect ableism. This presentation serves two purposes. First, it aims to share my first-hand experiences of negotiating with the inaccessibility of concerts as a kind of self-empowerment and awareness-raising. It would unravel the ableist nature of inaccessibility across different stages of concert arrangement, e.g., overall service culture, scope of target audience, promotional materials, ticketing, seating options, venue accessibility, symbols and terminology, and attitudinal responses of the personnel. Second, it would discuss the stigmatization and detrimental impact on wellbeing of inaccessibility of concerts on different stakeholders, such as patrons with disability, the companions, concert staff, and bystanders. Ecological framework would be adopted to systematize and synthesize these real-life experiences which would cut across various ecological levels such as the individual, interpersonal, organizational, intergroup, and societal levels. Although the present first-person account would focus on pop music concerts as an illustrative example, the user experience and rationale could be reasonably extended to other arts and cultural activities such as theater performances and museum exhibitions to inform future research and practices. Recommendations of inclusive practices that could enhance accessibility of arts and cultural activities will be discussed.
DescriptionHosted by the Center on Disability Studies (CDS), College of Education, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Pac Rim Recorded Sessions: Flourishing, Well-being, and Social-Emotional Learning
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/306003

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorMa, YK-
dc.date.accessioned2021-10-20T10:17:26Z-
dc.date.available2021-10-20T10:17:26Z-
dc.date.issued2021-
dc.identifier.citationThe 36th Annual Pacific Rim International Conference on Disability & Diversity: INNOVATE (PacRim 2021), Virtual Conference, Hawaii, USA, 1-2 March 2021-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/306003-
dc.descriptionHosted by the Center on Disability Studies (CDS), College of Education, University of Hawaii at Manoa-
dc.descriptionPac Rim Recorded Sessions: Flourishing, Well-being, and Social-Emotional Learning-
dc.description.abstractArts and cultural activities enable body-mind rejuvenation, representation and appreciation of our surroundings. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) Article 9 clearly asserts the significance of ensuring accessibility, and the Article 30 recognizes the right of people with disability to participate in arts and cultural activities on equal basis with others. However, fundamental choices and opportunities for people with disability in arts and cultural activities are still seriously denied under the ableist culture. At the most basic level, “accessibility” plays a significant role in determining whether people with disability can literally “join” the arts and cultural activities. Going to concerts is a common example of participation in arts and cultural activities. As a wheelchair user with congenital muscular dystrophy and an enthusiastic concert-goer, I observe that the access to concerts has been greatly improved throughout the years, but the user experiences are often stigmatizing which reflect ableism. This presentation serves two purposes. First, it aims to share my first-hand experiences of negotiating with the inaccessibility of concerts as a kind of self-empowerment and awareness-raising. It would unravel the ableist nature of inaccessibility across different stages of concert arrangement, e.g., overall service culture, scope of target audience, promotional materials, ticketing, seating options, venue accessibility, symbols and terminology, and attitudinal responses of the personnel. Second, it would discuss the stigmatization and detrimental impact on wellbeing of inaccessibility of concerts on different stakeholders, such as patrons with disability, the companions, concert staff, and bystanders. Ecological framework would be adopted to systematize and synthesize these real-life experiences which would cut across various ecological levels such as the individual, interpersonal, organizational, intergroup, and societal levels. Although the present first-person account would focus on pop music concerts as an illustrative example, the user experience and rationale could be reasonably extended to other arts and cultural activities such as theater performances and museum exhibitions to inform future research and practices. Recommendations of inclusive practices that could enhance accessibility of arts and cultural activities will be discussed.-
dc.languageeng-
dc.relation.ispartofThe 36th Pacific Rim International Conference on Disability & Diversity (PacRim 2021)-
dc.subjectpeople with disability-
dc.subjectaccessibility-
dc.subjectableism-
dc.subjecthuman rights-
dc.subjectecological model-
dc.titleThe quest to being recognized as a valued person: First-person account of ecological approach to inaccessibility of arts and cultural activities-
dc.typeConference_Paper-
dc.identifier.emailMa, YK: gloria1@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.hkuros327795-

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