厕所标志作为边界标记:探索残疾人进入空间的途径

Slater, Jones
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引用次数: 3

摘要

允许我们进入或不进入特定场所的标志,比如厕所门上的标志,在准公共空间和私人空间之间划出了模糊的界限,对我们的生活和身份产生了深远的影响。在本文中,我们借鉴了以跨性别者、酷儿和残疾人的厕所进入/排斥经历为中心的研究,探索厕所门上的标志如何塑造残疾人离家上厕所的经历,从而更广泛地使用公共空间。我们认为,国际通行标志(ISA)的使用既提供了可达性的虚假承诺,又通过(重新)强制执行特定的公众对残疾的想象来维持残疾的边界。我们注意到,在机构和商业环境中,人们离家在外时被迫依赖厕所,并辩称,在资本主义制度下,便利性一直受到其盈利潜力的限制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Toilet Signs as Border Markers: Exploring Disabled People's Access to Space
Signs prescribing our permission to enter or abstain from specific places, such as those on toilet doors, mark murky borders between quasi-public and private space and have profound impacts upon our lives and identities. In this paper we draw on research which centred trans, queer and disabled people’s experiences of toilet in/exclusion to explore how the signs on toilet doors shape disabled people’s experiences of toilet access away from home and therefore their use of public space more broadly. We argue that the use of the International Symbol of Access (ISA) both delivers a false promise of accessibility and maintains the borders of disability through (re)enforcing a particular public imaginary of disability. We note the forced reliance on toilets in institutional and commercial settings when away from home and argue that, under capitalism, accessibility is persistently restricted by its potential to be lucrative.
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