On the art of audio description: Naomi Kawase's Radiance
Keywords: film, disability, medical humanities.
Abstract
Audio description improves access to visual culture for people who are unable to fully participate in it due to visual impairments. Because of this direct benefit to disabled people, it is usually defined as an accommodation or inclusion service. Rather than adopting this view, we see disability as a creative force, arguing that it can engender a new dimension of art: audio description as a form of cinematic ekphrasis. This claim is made by drawing on the 2017 movie Radiance, by Japanese director Naomi Kawase. This movie puts audio description in the spotlight and stimulates discussion on this underdeveloped and under-recognised art. Radiance is structured around the process of making the audio description, thus offering good insight into the artistry and main challenges of this process. Between the words of this meditation on the art of audio description, Kawase also challenges the dominant ocular normative narrative on blindness as a deficiency and provokes a discussion on the contribution that blindnesswith its different, still culturally unexplored modes of perceptioncould make to the interpretation of visual arts. Radiance can thus be treated as an artful argument for the greater recognition of disabled peoples right to participate in cultural life. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024.
Más información
| Título según WOS: | On the art of audio description: Naomi Kawase's Radiance |
| Título según SCOPUS: | On the art of audio description: Naomi Kawases Radiance |
| Título de la Revista: | Medical Humanities |
| Volumen: | 50 |
| Número: | 2 |
| Editorial: | BMJ Publishing Group |
| Fecha de publicación: | 2024 |
| Página de inicio: | 392 |
| Página final: | 407 |
| Idioma: | English |
| Financiamiento/Sponsor: | ANID |
| DOI: |
10.1136/medhum-2023-012802 |
| Notas: | ISI, SCOPUS |