Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research (Apr 2019)

Rehab/ituation from a Phenomenological Perspective: The Case of Fencing for the Blind and Visually Impaired

  • Ana Koncul,
  • Jenny Slatman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.16993/sjdr.559
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1

Abstract

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The emerging discipline of fencing for the blind and visually impaired is a distinct practice that calls for the unconventional employment of perceptual affordances and bodily doings. This paper explores the meaning of ability and agency in narratives of blind and visually impaired fencers’ lived experiences. By focusing on narratives of risk taking, active handling, and creativity, we have identified three specific ways in which fencers experience their being-in-the-world. Our findings suggest that instead of rehabilitating to the norm, fencing contributes to rehab/ituation: conceptualising the rearrangement of one’s body schema according to personal affordances. This concept, which is present in the notion of 'rehab/ituation' as opposed to rehabilitation, makes possible a more creative and inclusive way of being in the world. Our respondents’ stories of intelligence in the flesh, know-how and ability, are stories of fitting – whereas disorientations and disruptions represent a sort of misfitting between the body and an environment.

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