Triple Vision

From Homer to Stevie Wonder: Two-and-a-Half Centuries of the Single Story

Episode Summary

"In this episode the Triple Vision team continues its exploration of the danger of a single story by speaking with Dr. M. Leona Godin. Dr. Godin, who has taught literature and humanities at New York University, is a writer, performer and educator, lecturing on art, accessibility, technology, and disability. In this episode, she speaks with Peter Field and Hanna Leavitt about the themes emerging from her book, There Plant Eyes: A Personal and Cultural History of Blindness. She reflects on how some of the single stories of blindness over the past two-and-a-half centuries have led to myth, stereotyping and unbridled inspiration porn. ""I think the most obvious thing that I am pushing back on in my book is that the story of blindness in our literature, in our media, our films, and even from a journalistic perspective, has almost exclusively been told by sighted people. That is the No. 1 big issue, because I think that the ideas that sighted people have about blind people just don't make any sense in terms of our own lived experience.” Learn more about There Plant Eyes: A Personal and Cultural History of Blindness: https://drmlgodin.com/2021/05/there-plant-eyes-a-personal-and-cultural-history-of-blindness/"