Typically, the question of accessibility online is considered in technical terms: How does this website need to be designed? What ALT text is appropriate for this image? Are captions available for this video? And obviously, knowing the technical aspects of accessibility is important.
But if accessibility stops at the technical requirements, we forget that there are people on the other side of those checklists and manuals. We forget that even the most rigorous checklist can’t account for everyone and their experiences. We forget to ask critical questions that seem obvious when it comes to a backstage pass but are readily dismissed when it comes to most other social spaces.
In the 3rd episode of my 5-part series on Decoding Empathy, I talk with Erin Perkins, an accessibility educator and the founder of MabelyQ, and draw on the work of disability studies scholar Tanya Titchkosky to theorize the overlap between access and empathy—and what it means for you.
Footnotes:
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00:00 - Backstage Pass
03:20 - Introduction
04:21 - Accessibility is a Complex Form of Perception
06:07 - Erin's Trouble Accessing Online Content
09:06 - Recognizing Disability
11:04 - A Politics of Wonder
12:51 - The Inaccessibility Tax
15:00 - The First Steps to Accessibility
17:35 - Practicing Open-Minded Empathy
19:22 - Expanding Our Circle of Recognition
23:26 - Uncovering Our "Half and Half" Nature
25:33 - Biographical Illumination
29:03 - Credits