ipl-logo

Stereotypes Of A Disabled Person Essay

1354 Words6 Pages

Media
How we view the disabled, or for that matter how we view any number of things in our world, can be highly influenced by the media. The first hurdle is the challenge to avoid stereotyping.
No one group, however delineated, are all the same. “Part of stereotyping is the attitude that members of a particular group are the same, or else fall into a very small number of types. This is particularly true in the few cases where persons with a disability appear in media.” “In a report, the Canadian Association of Broadcasters, found that “disabled individuals are viewed as the objects of pity and depicted as having the same attributes” (mediasmarts.ca), regardless of what the disability may be. The media tends to portray disabled people in three ways; hero, victim and villain.
The “victim” is used by the …show more content…

Wide-spread studies of the subject were occurring by 1900. The theory only fell into disfavor after the perversion of its doctrines by the Nazis” (Brignell)
“In 1986, Francis Walker noted in the Atlantic Monthly” that it was necessary to strain out those who were “deaf, dumb, blind, idiotic, insane pauper or criminal.” Resentment for the “attempts of such persons to impose themselves on us” was widespread. These sentiments went deeper than just public sentiment, and even threatened equal rights, as guaranteed under the

Open Document