• LillyPip@lemmy.ca
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    21 days ago

    But what this art says to me, as a wheelchair user, is something completely different because this design is the opposite of inclusive. Is that what is meant?

    This design says I should be excluded – taking it as art, this design communicates everyone having conversations and leaving me out, because that back bar will exclude me by design.

    If I’m to socialise, I should be on one end or the other, but that middle part means I’ll be artificially excluded by the environment.

    Is that what it’s meant to mean?

    • AnarchistArtificer@slrpnk.net
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      20 days ago

      What it’s meant to mean is “yay us! We’re doing inclusivity!”

      What it actually means, to me, is “we will make a show of valuing disabled people, but we won’t go so far as to actually include them in the design process, thereby making this bench an artifact to our own self congratulation, as well as making wheelchair users feel excluded in a far more insidious way than they already did”.

      And I feel like an asshole to say it like that, but it’s so annoying to see well intentioned people fall at literally the first hurdle. Like, if they truly do see us as people who have intrinsic value that means we are worth including, then they also need to see us in our full personhood and include us in the process. The alternative is that their enthusiasm will just cause more money to be pissed down the drain on symbolic gestures that don’t fulfill their intended purpose