Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice
Traditional Manuscripts
Editorial Introduction: Making human rights visible as a visual and cultural practice
- Dipti Desai
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 7-10
Arts Practice as Agency: The Right to Represent and Reinterpret Personal and Social Significance
- James Haywood Rolling
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 11-24
The Fork
- Rachel Marie-Crane Williams
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 25-36
Digital Storytelling and the Pedagogy of Human Rights
- Gail Benick
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 37-46
Disrupting Discourse Digitally for LGBTQ Rights
- Mindi Rhoades
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 47-64
Contemporary art as a resource for learning about human rights: a case study of the use of the Placenta Methodology with hospitalized adolescents
- María Acaso
- Noelia Antúnez
- Noemí Ávila
- Marta García
- Teresa Gutiérrez
- Clara Megías
- Ma Carmen Moreno
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 65-80
Violation of Human Rights As Revealed in Afghan Children’s Artworks
- Themina Kader
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 81-91
Human Rights, Collective Memory, and Counter Memory: Unpacking the Meaning of Monument Avenue in Richmond, Virginia
- Melanie L. Buffington
- Erin Waldner
Volume 29 • Issue 1 • 2011 • Making Human Rights Visible as a Visual and Cultural Practice • 92-107