A one-day symposium at the Museum of the Home will explore how experiences of disability, D/deafness and neurodiversity interact with domestic space, through a range of methodological approaches including art and social history, literature, geographies of home, and inclusive curation. From new readings of Elisabeth Frink's 'Blind Beggar and His Dog', to the complex feelings generated by the intersection of modern hearing and domestic technologies, this event will shed light on disability and the home in historical, contemporary, and theoretical contexts, affording insights and exchange between a broad range of disciplinary approaches.
Program
10:00 Welcome and introductions
Alison Blunt (Co-Director, Centre for Studies of Home / Queen Mary University of London)
Aurelien Enjalbert (Museum of the Home)
India Whiteley (Queen Mary University of London)
10.30 Session 1
Nicole Matthews and Jess Kirkness (Macquire University, Sydney) Narrating Less than Beloved Objects: Domestic Spaces, Everyday Mobile Media and Amplification Technologies
Lauren Alderton (Royal Institute of British Architects)
Housing Precarity and Health Inequalities Amongst Gypsy and Traveller Communities
Katherine Brickell and Rosalie Warnock (Kings College London)
Sensory Lives: Neurodiverse Children and Families in Temporary Accommodation
Q&A
11.50 Break
12.10 Session 2
Iris Sirendi (University of Westminster)
“What it Means to Us": Exhibiting Assistive Technology Inclusively Through a Social History Lens
House to House Art Project
Q&A
13.10 Lunch
14.00 Session 3
Muneera Alkhelaifi (Queen Mary University of London)
Imagining a Way Out: Disability and Domestic Space in Raja Alem’s ‘The Dove’s Necklace’
Rosamund Lily West (University of Manchester)
The Figure of Elisabeth Frink’s ‘Blind Beggar and His Dog’
Q&A
15.00 Session 4
Alice Conibere (University of Kent / National Trust)
‘Invalid Furniture’: Embodying ‘Disability’ in Domestic Spaces of the Long Nineteenth Century?
Jessie Buckle (University College London / Motionspot)
Epilepsy, Stigma and Institutionalisation
Jane Hamlett (Royal Holloway University of London)
‘I Must and Will Come Home’: Writing Home from Bethlem Hospital in the Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
Q&A
16.20 Closing remarks
16.30 Drinks reception
18.00 END
Tickets are £20 or £15 concessions
Contact: i.whiteleyqmul.ac.uk
Reference:
CONF: Disability At Home (London, 15 May 25). In: ArtHist.net, May 13, 2025 (accessed May 15, 2025), <https://arthist.net/archive/49216>.