Date: Wednesday, August 7th, 2013 21:48 (UTC)
luna_plath: (eye)
From: [personal profile] luna_plath
This is a great discussion question!

I'm legally blind (can't drive, can't read print, use a guide dog and Braille) and the lack of disabled characters in fiction does bother me. Also, the unrealistic or two-dimensional depictions of the disabled in fiction is just as bad. My blindness is due to albinism (being albino) and there are so many stereotypes about that condition so I actively try to stay away from books/films that have albino characters. They seem to always get it wrong and treat albinism like this witch doctor thing when it's really just a medical condition.

And as for the blind, there are very few examples of that in literature at all. An exception would be The Red Dragon by Thomas Harris, where one of the main characters is blind. She's written as having a job, getting to work on her own, living on her own, and being just as independent as most blind adults I know. Her character was just as three-dimensional and fully formed as any other character in the novel. It was a very pleasant surprise!

Another author that does a good job of depicting disability is George R. R. Martin. His A Song of Ice and Fire series has characters with dwarfism, mobility impairments, visual impairments, etc, and he does an excellent job of making them much more than their disability.
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