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Blindness in literature



         


Different cultures through history have depicted blindness in a variety of ways; among the Greeks, for example, it was a punishment from the gods, for which the afflicted individual was often granted compensation in the form of artistic genius. Judeo-Christian literature positioned blindness as a flaw; only through a cure could God’s love be made manifest, when the scales would fall away from the eyes of an afflicted individual upon contact with a holy man or relic. Almost without exception in early literature, blind people could bring this condition down upon themselves through sin or trespasses against the gods, but were never the sole instruments of its reversal.

It is impossible to make a blanket generalization about how the blind were treated in literature beyond that point - they were marvelous, gifted, evil, malicious, ignorant, wise, helpless, innocent, or burdensome depending upon who wrote the story - except to say that blindness is perceived to be such a loss that it leaves an indelible mark on a person’s character.

Even pioneers in training the blind, such as H.G. Wells, in which blind people are depicted as self-sufficient but close-minded and potentially cruel. A sited man finds himself in a country which has been closed off to the rest of the world for centuries, and whose inhabitants had all become blind and had been blind for generations. They have evolved into human beings with other sharp senses, do not understand the use of eyes and believe that their village is the only place in the world. They want to cut the stranger's eyes out, but the story ends happily as he escapes. The reader is left admiring the resourcefullness of the blind people but despairing because of their unwillingness to understand non-blind people.

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Literature by blind people

While blind and visually impaired people had contributed to the body of common literature for centuries, the creation of autobiographical materials, or materials specific to blindness, is relatively new.

Most people are familiar with Helen Keller, who was both blind and deaf, but there has been considerable progress since the publication of her work.

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