Disability, as anthropogenesis, allows us to reflect upon a humanity that has to be learned, rather than being granted at birth. Man is born without knowing how to speak, write, eat or walk; unless being taught, he is incapable of surviving without the civilising cares of culture. Hence, technique is presented as the mastery of the relationship between nature and humanity; if a man is tossed by nature into life without survival abilities, technique allows him to produce himself.
Through discipline, how to learn to manipulate the body is rationalised, and how to perform control exercises on oneself that standardise the most common activities, even the strictest moral and ethical codes, through a normative imposition. This is how, under the guardianship of a relatively outdated thinking model, one of the distinctions of what is human is expressed with an anatomical behavior: walking upright.
Kilde: Simian
Kay Fiskers Plads 17
ved Ørestad Metro station
2300 København S
Tilgængelighed:
Niveaufri adgang - nej
Handicaptoilet - ja
Gratis for ledsager - ja
fre-søn 12-17 (i udstillingsperioder)
Gratis entré