Penny R. and p.j. sent in a link to the American Able project. A description from the artist’s website:
‘American Able’ intends to, through spoof, reveal the ways in which women with disabilities are invisibilized in advertising and mass media. I chose American Apparel not just for their notable style, but also for their claims that many of their models are just ‘every day’ women… Women with disabilities go unrepresented…in most of popular culture. Rarely, if ever, are women with disabilities portrayed in anything other than an asexual manner, for ‘disabled’ bodies are largely perceived as ‘undesirable’…
Too often, the pervasive influence of imagery in mass media goes unexamined, consumed en masse by the public. However, this imagery has real, oppressive effects on people who are continuously ‘othered’ by society. The model, Jes Sachse, and I intend to reveal these stories by placing her in a position where women with disabilities are typically excluded.
The goal is admirable. Individuals with disabilities are routinely ignored in pop culture, and if depicted, they are often either mocked or are devoid of sexuality (notable examples being the documentary Murderball and the depiction of a character in a wheelchair on the TV show Friday Night Lights, though both focus solely on men with disabilities who generally have relationships with women who do not).
That said, it brings up the eternal question regarding artistic endeavors, particularly those aimed at undermining prejudices: does it work? The idea here is to show a woman with disabilities in sexualized contexts and use humor to counter popular conceptions of those with disabilities as asexual (and parody American Apparel in the process). As with any use of parody/irony/etc., it poses a dilemma. Will viewers get it? Will they grasp the intent and look at the images through that lens? Will it lead some people to question why they might find these photos shocking, why a woman with a disability shown in sexual situations would be surprising, or the reason for any discomfort they might feel when looking at them?
Or will people respond by ridiculing Jes, or even feeling disgusted? Will they look further into those feelings and why they might have them? Will it change anything?
And how do you decide if it’s worth it? If half of viewers engage in some introspection and examining of their own prejudices, and half don’t, is that a sufficient trade-off? If 90% of people ridiculed the images and it reinforced their belief that bodies of those with disabilities are undesirable, but 10% would think about how women with disabilities are de-sexualized, or that American Apparel presents a very narrow range of body types as “normal,” everyday women, would you feel that you had accomplished something significant? Is it the artist’s responsibility to care?
Similar questions have been posed about photos of individuals from Appalachia: do they humanize people often depicted as backward “hillbillies,” or do they actually reinforce perceptions that everyone living in the area is poor and rural?
How do you negotiate the use of art to make social statements (whether questioning prejudices, pointing out inequalities, or humanizing stigmatized groups), considering that once you put something out in the public domain, you have little control over how people interpret it and whether they take from it the opposite message you intended, perhaps even ridiculing your subjects as a result of your project?
Gwen Sharp is an associate professor of sociology at Nevada State College. You can follow her on Twitter at @gwensharpnv.
Comments 31
Penny — May 6, 2010
"And how do you decide if it’s worth it?" Well, I'd ask how you decide that ANYTHING is worth doing--teaching, writing, composing a song, building a sandcastle? I don't think interesting art happens by gauging the percentage of viewers/readers/listeners who will get it, or how much you can control its reception.
Anonnymouse — May 6, 2010
Similar to Jason Street's character in Friday Night Lights, there's Artie in Glee and Joan's older brother (played by Jason Ritter) in Joan of Arcadia. All white men, all played by able-bodied actors.
Sivartis — May 6, 2010
http://katawa-shoujo.com/
Charlotte — May 6, 2010
Making something women visible/acceptable in the eyes of the mainstream by presenting them as sexy has never sat right with me. Is it liberating to go from disrespected to disrespected but sexy? It IS super shitty and worth attention how disabled people are never portrayed as sexy but then, at least in the bigger ladyscape, shouldn't we strive to overcome the whole "a conventionally attractive woman = a better woman" mindset? I have a similar issue with fat acceptance, but I know that's a whole different animal.
Anyway this project is really interesting and I don't wanna condemn it or anything. Other than the fact that American Apparel gives me the rape vibes, I mean. Because it totally does.
Chenoa — May 6, 2010
I love it! Maybe... well, yes, mostly because I think the "tops and bottoms" one is hilarious. I mean, I'd love to see an actual ad that featured an *actual* queer couple.
Um — May 6, 2010
This reminds me of the discussion about the images of a lesbian couple a while back, and I have the same thought I did then: images like this (designed to challenge stereotypes) have a fine line to walk, and probably work best when they fall somewhere between images that might merely reinforce the stereotype and images that reinforce the mainstream ideal.
Makenzie — May 6, 2010
Huh. I looked at all the pictures without reading the text first for some reason, and didn't get that it was a parody at all...just some woman, maybe for a magazine article about her or something.
Alice — May 7, 2010
Things like this are under-represented in the media because the media wants to make money. Models with disabilities would generally be shocking in advertisement, leading to a decrease in sales; the company's revenue would decrease, the shareholders won't be happy. Until certain things become socially acceptable it is not economically viable to ask the media to *make* them acceptable. Once upon a time it would have been unfathomable to use an interracial couple in an advertisement - now it's not particularly unusual. The media is the mirror of society, not its governess.
River Wolfe — May 8, 2010
I ♥ Jes
Emily — May 8, 2010
Am I the only one who was a little turned on by these? (I'm a very visual person and porn can make me wetter than a shower in seconds) I don't like AA but don't really have a prob with their ads except perhaps that they are exploitative of the models (in that I heard the regular workers are the models so I would assume some pressure to be in them and prob some discrimination in hiring because of this expectation)and find these hot for similar reasons. They are very nice photos and done with humor which is always great. Love the tops and bottoms bty. Oh, and I went to Jes's website that was linked and really dig her work. Anyway, my two cents.
maggie — May 9, 2010
Well, Jes, I think you're great and had I known you were in Peterborough it would have been a less depressing place.
K — May 11, 2010
Jes said - "sure, i don’t have to sexualize myself to show you my agency and autonomy. but why can’t i? why does everyone have an opinion on whether this series was “too much” or “disability exploitation”. "
A THOUSAND TIMES YES.
It is NOT up to the able-bodied community at large to decided what is and is not "proper" for disabled people to do with their bodies, and it really saddens me that this blog, which is one of my favorites w/r/t the variety and intersectionality of oppression in the media, is questioning the validity of these images.
Also, the 'deviance' tag? Classy.
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