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Accepted Paper:
Paper short abstract:
Guide dogs were one of the main mobility aids developed for disabled veterans after the First World War. The interactions at the first guide dog schools (1916-1939) show how trainers, guide dogs and visually impaired people related and how agency shifted between them.
Paper long abstract:
Guide dogs have been part of human history for a long time, but only were trained systematically from 1916 onwards as a result of the many German soldiers that were blinded during the First World War. The years after the war were a key period for the development of mobility aids, including guide dogs and the white mobility cane. In guide dog training, issues of dependency, agency and materiality come together that play a role in both disability and animal history, making it productive to combine both fields. I used praxiography to answer the question how visual disability was enacted in the specific practices of guide dog training from 1916 until 1939 in the guide dog schools of the Deutscher Verein für Sanitätshunde, the Verein für deutsche Schäferhunde, L’Oeil qui Voit, the Nederlands Geleidehonden Fonds and the Institut für Umweltforschung. The interactions that took place ‘on the ground’ between the trainer, visually impaired person and dog in the coming into being of the guide dog as a mobility aid are the focus of the research. The attribution of agency over the three main actors I study shifted over the course of the interbellum. From a passive presence, the visually impaired person became an active participant of guide dog training. Simultaneously, the dog was considered a living being with personality rather than a well-trained machine. Visual disability continued to be a problem, but it became an obstacle to overcome instead of a fact of life to work around.
Human-animal histories transformed by technologies
Session 1 Monday 19 August, 2024, -