Anthropology Colloquium Fall 2023 Series

November 9, 3:00pm - 3:00pm
Mānoa Campus, Crawford Hall 115

Blind Alterity, or, "What difference does blindness make?" A talk presented by Saquib Usman, PhD Candidate, University of Michigan Lecturer, Anthropology Dept., University of Hawai’i "What difference does blindness make? How does blindness afford distinct ways of attending to the world? This talk presents ethnographic vignettes of sensory activities from Dali Gimba, a unique Saharan village whose population is mostly blind from birth due to a dominant genetic condition that has been passed on for seven generations. Through these vignettes, I challenge conceptions of blindness that associate it with the absence, lack, or compensation of sight, and instead consider how blindness mediates alternative capacities, habits, and styles of attending to and engaging with the world." Saquib Usman is a PhD candidate at the University of Michigan and a regular lecturer in the anthropology department at the University of HawaiÊ»i – ²ÑÄå²Ô´Ç²¹. His research explores the intricate relationships between blindness, sight, divination, and the environment in Islamic, Arabic-speaking, and African contexts.


Event Sponsor
Anthropology, Mānoa Campus

More Information
Marti Kerton, 808-956-7153, anthprog@hawaii.edu, , 2023_Colloquium_Saquib (PDF)

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