English, asked by tukabei880, 11 months ago

what happened during the blind day​

Answers

Answered by Astro69
0

The history of the blind is difficult to chart. There are few examples before the 19th century of sustained organized efforts by the blind to act in concert to achieve collective goals, and prior to the 18th century the history of the blind is atomistic, consisting of stories of protagonists in religious and secular stories who weave in and out of popular consciousness, serve as object lessons, or provide inspiration to the sighted. What is left to the historian is a collection of biographies of “extraordinary” individuals, from Homer to Helen Keller, Louis Braille to Jorge Luis Borges, which provides little in the way of a narrative thread that one can pull together to create a tapestry of blind history. The negative historical assumption is of the blind as objects of charity rather than active agents in history. Occasionally, the blind could be found clustered in certain state- or church-sanctioned professions or guilds, but in large part blindness was assumed to be a ticket to misery, a curse, or a sentence to second-class status.

The blind, in truth, occupy no greater or lesser a place in history commensurate to their numbers in the general population. There are historical examples of blind teachers, soldiers, religious and secular leaders, scientists, philosophers, mathematicians, historians, and a variety of other professionals. There are, as with the sighted, countless blind who lived out their lives in quiet obscurity. Thus, it can be said that while history offers a pantheon of blind individuals, there exists nothing unique to blind people that is unknown to the sighted. Even so, since the 19th century the blind have made concerted efforts to come together to improve their situation, to share strategies of success, and to have a voice in society, rather than to be objects of curiosity and speculation.

Answered by FsG11AJ
0

Answer:

What had been happend during the blind day?

Blind Faith were an English supergroup featuring Steve Winwood, Eric Clapton, Ginger Baker, and Ric Grech, active in mostly 1969. ... Clapton became increasingly isolated during the tour, preferring to spend time with support act Delaney & Bonnie, and the band split up immediately after their last performance on the tour.

Similar questions