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Life Unseen: A Story of Blindness
Selina Mills
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Description for Life Unseen: A Story of Blindness
Hardback. Combining her own experience with an examination of the history of blindness in the Western world, author shows that sightlessness has been an 'active' force in history, rather than the passive condition which is too readily assumed. Num Pages: 256 pages. BIC Classification: HBTB; JFFG. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 234 x 156. .
Imagine a world without sight. Is it dark and gloomy? Is it terrifying and isolating? Or is it simply a state of not seeing, which we have demonised and sentimentalized over the centuries? And why is blindness so frightening? In this fascinating historical adventure, Broadcaster and author Selina Mills takes us on a journey through the history of blindness in Western Culture to discover that blindness is not so dark after all. Inspired by her own experience of losing her sight as she forged a successful journalistic career, Life Unseen takes us through a ... Read morepersonal and unsentimental historical quest through the lives, stories and achievements of blind people - as well as those sighted people who sought to patronize, demonize and fix them. From the blind poet Homer, through the myths and moralising of early medieval culture to the scientific and medical discoveries of the Enlightenment and modern times, the story of blindness turns out to be a story of our whole culture. Show Less
Product Details
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC United Kingdom
Place of Publication
, United Kingdom
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 5 to 9 working days
About Selina Mills
Selina Mills is an award-winning writer and broadcaster who is legally blind. Educated in the USA and the UK, Selina has worked as a senior reporter and broadcaster for Reuters, The Daily Telegraph, and the BBC.
Reviews for Life Unseen: A Story of Blindness
Written with wit, warmth and razor-sharp insight, this book should be essential reading for anyone with an interest in blindness, history, society, culture and beyond.
Anna Bonet
Non-fiction book of the month, The i
Informative, heartfelt … This admirable book dispels myths around the condition.
Martin Chilton
The Independent
Spirited, irreverent … Life Unseen ... Read moreoffers an illuminating peek into one woman’s world, and asks searching questions of us all in terms of the different ways in which we perceive our world. There are no glib answers because blindness, as Life Unseen demonstrates, is a subject riven with ambiguity and complexity. In this important and hugely enjoyable book, Mills clears away some of the myths and injustices that surround it.
Susan Flockhart
The Herald
It’s an extraordinary account of blindness, the mythology that surrounds it, the fallacies and taboos connected to it, and the attitudes towards it throughout the ages. Written by an author who is herself blind, it’s filled with fascinating information, practical insights and teaching moments about the nature of imagination, language and perception of our world.
Joanne Harris
The Guardian
Selina Mills’s defiant book is a thundering challenge to our sighted notions of blindness, a resounding battle cry for a revolution in our age-old perceptions of being blind that should be read by sighted people everywhere.
Wendy Moore
Times Literary Supplement
A beautiful, tender and inspiring book about seeing the world in a different way.
Peter Frankopan
Spirited … [A] powerful memoir-cum-manifesto.
Ysenda Maxtone Graham
The Spectator
A powerful and erudite social history of blindness in the Western world interwoven with an extraordinarily moving but unsentimental account of her own gradual life-long descent into blindness.
Julia Hamilton
The Catholic Herald
A much-needed and powerful examination of what it is to be blind.
Simon Evans
Choice
Selina Mills de-mystifies blindness both in its material reality as well as its manifold superstitions. That she does this with wit and intelligence makes this a superb and memorable read.
Stephen Kuusisto, Syracuse University, USA
An original, well-researched work that provides superb insight into the world of people with visual impairment.
Hektoen International
What is it like to be blind-or nearly blind? In this enchanting, quirky memoir, Selina Mills leads us through her life among the curious, pitying, and well-wishing sighted. Anecdotes from myth, religion, literature, and medicine reveal the blind as devil, prophet, victim, genius, exhibit, disabled—and clown. The book’s cheerful revelation is that the blind are ‘ordinary’, that darkness is not all dark.
Janet Todd
Selina Mills crafts a compelling narrative that illuminates and animates the story of a community that has always existed but has been relegated to the margins and the shadows. Mills takes readers along on her personal journey as she comes to terms with her own blindness with candor and warmth. She shares her fears, her irritation, her rage, and yes, her joy, as her contemporary story resonates with the lives of famous and lesser known blind writers, musicians, inventors and leaders from the past and present. This book will help to reform the image of blindness from a tragedy that must be overcome to simply another facet of human diversity.
Georgina Kleege, University of California, Berkely, USA
The metanarrative of blindness hangs over us all, invites us to identify as sighted or blind, and thus to follow numerous binary assumptions that pertain to everything from sexuality to epistemology. Life Unseen helps to disrupt the myths, tropes, and stereotypes of the metanarrative via the often under-rated power of memoire. As such, the book makes an important contribution to blindness studies.
David Bolt, Professor of Disability Studies and Interdisciplinarity at Liverpool Hope University
This is a wonderfully refreshing account of blindness. With a winning mix of wit and erudition, Mills cuts through the stereotypes and clichés of blindness to give us a funny, touching and memorable account of her quest to understand why blindness gets such a bad press. Part history, part memoir, Mills’s writing takes us through an alternative history of blindness whilst reflecting with honesty and beauty on her personal journey into sight loss. A significant contribution to the field of critical blindness studies.
Hannah Thompson, Royal Holloway University of London, UK
Selina Mills achieves that finest of balances in Life Unseen, to discuss important intellectual and social issues in an entertaining and occasionally light-hearted way. Through an examination of topics such as schooling, a love of reading and writing and the popular need to cure blindness, Mills examines trends both current and historical, providing a very real experience of the cultural concept of blindness and what it is to be a blind person.
Simon Hayhoe, University of Bath, UK
I have been waiting, and hoping, for a book like this one. In Life Unseen, Selina Mills engages the myths and realities of blindness in ways that are both deeply researched and powerfully personal. Challenging stereotypes that have accrued over centuries, honoring the experiences of blind people past and present, Mills offers us a cultural history of blindness that is welcoming, whip smart, and surprisingly witty. This is a must read, and a very pleasurable read, for anyone interested in what blindness means and why blindness matters.
Vanessa Warne, University of Manitoba, Canada
This is a deeply personal and remarkably courageous book, exploring historical and literary constructions of blindness as manifestations of heroism or tragedy which set blind people apart from society as distinctly ‘others’. It argues convincingly that such stereotypes should be aside so that blind people can voice their own diverse experiences as ordinary human beings.
Anna Sapir Abulafia, Oxford University, UK
Part history, part memoir, part manifesto, Life Unseen is smart, powerful and funny. Selina Mills is a word painter of rare originality, creating a picture of a world where sightlessness is neither black nor white but shades of being.
Amanda Foreman, author of Georgiana, Duchess of Devonshire Show Less