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Keywords: interpersonal communication
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Journal Articles
Journal:
Journal of Autoethnography
Journal of Autoethnography (2020) 1 (4): 370–377.
Published: 21 September 2020
... to re-enter the sight-biased world. © 2020 by The Regents of the University of California 2020 Autoethnography nonverbal visual impairment communication interpersonal communication blind culture In a world where medical technology dominates most daily hospital rituals, a simple...
Abstract
In Narrating the Closet , Adams described “coming out” as a seemingly never-ending ongoing process. I reflected on the number of times I had to explain how a blind guy could see, and I had a better understanding of coming out. Although I do not have the same negative social stigma, I often get weary repeating myself, trying to explain how a blind guy can see. Autoethnography can provide the reader with an opportunity to embrace the cultural standpoint of the writer, 1 especially if they find a way to associate the experience with their own journey. I am attempting to “seek dimensions of experience that will engender connection and recognition in the midst of complexity.” 2 I offer this article to provide a perspective of the phenomenon created when an adventitiously blind person (a person who had sight long enough to have visual references, usually after the age of five) tries to re-enter the sight-biased world.