Recognizing difference: in/visibility in the everyday life of individuals with facial limb absence

People who lack part(s) of their face have a visibly different appearance both due to their facial difference itself and the medical aids that they use to cover it (e.g. prostheses, bandages). In this article, we draw on interviews with affected individuals in order to investigate how visible differ...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Disability & society Vol. 33; no. 5; pp. 743 - 762
Main Authors: Yaron, Gili, Meershoek, Agnes, Widdershoven, Guy, Slatman, Jenny
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Abingdon Taylor & Francis Ltd 01-06-2018
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Summary:People who lack part(s) of their face have a visibly different appearance both due to their facial difference itself and the medical aids that they use to cover it (e.g. prostheses, bandages). In this article, we draw on interviews with affected individuals in order to investigate how visible difference features in their everyday experience. The visibility of their facial difference, we show, comes into play as they interact with various others in the contexts of their daily life. However, respondents' visibility manifests in different ways, depending on whether they cover or uncover their facial difference. These different modes of visibility make for distinct 'visibility experiences', as participants meet others who notice - or fail to notice - their atypical appearance. By exploring these experiences, our article provides insights into the role of visibility in interviewees' everyday life, and demonstrates how they actively negotiate their social recognition within encounters with various others.
ISSN:0968-7599
1360-0508
DOI:10.1080/09687599.2018.1454300