Lisa J. Murphy doesn't make ordinary books. Most books are meant to be looked at, read only with your eyes. Hers are meant to be touched. Her book Tactile Mind, which she hand-crafted herself, is meant to be felt up, to be precise. It is an erotic book for the blind and visually impaired, though it can be enjoyed by the sighted as well.
A photographer with a certificate in Tactile Graphics from the Canadian National Institute for the Blind, Murphy learned to create touchable images of animals for books for visually impaired children. Then she realized that there was a lack of such books for adults only.
"There are no books of tactile pictures of nudes for adults, at least the last time I looked around," says Murphy. "We're breaking new ground. Playboy has (an edition with) Braille wording, but there are no pictures."
She says that while we live in a culture saturated with sexual images, the blind have been "left out."
There are more than 836,000 Canadians living with significant vision loss, according to the CNIB. As the population ages over the coming decade, this number is expected to rise dramatically. Though porn for the blind sounds like an oxymoron, Murphy assures that it is not.
Tactile Mind is half art object, half artisanal concept book. It contains explicit softcore images that are raised from its pages, along with Braille text and photos. The effect of the tactile, plastic "images" is a bit like that of an ancient Greek bas-relief. Or, somewhat less precisely, a smutty pop-up book. At $225 per numbered, signed copy, the book definitely isn't cheap.
4 comments:
Wow, way to screw up the blind! I pity the poor souls who buy this, expecting some sort of realism. (This featureless, jelly-donut-breasted, one handed woman could put them off of sex for good.
And is the overall facelessness some sort of commentary on the dehumanizing effect of pornography, or is it just that the artist can't do faces?
Elagie: I've seen this book; the woman is wearing a mask. As the article explains, the text describes what people are wearing and how they are posed, so the "readers" know how to interpret what they are feeling, such as missing or unusual features or body parts.
What explanation is needed? Stumps where hands should be are super sexy, everyone knows that.
Elagie the Internet really took off because of porn ans eroticism. They estimated that at one time about 90% of all browsings on internet were for sexually oriented information. And it is still about -if not anyhow- the highest rated query.
And also in printed information going well back to Roman times, sexually oriented content has been well-sold.
---Why then would blind people be any different...?
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