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Editorial Essay

Liza Sylvestre and Christopher Jones

 

VoCAEditor’sNote_CRJ_LMS.srt 

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Hello! 

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Firstly, this (I? We?) 

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is/am/are an .srt file. 

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An SRT is both a plain text file and a caption file. 

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Download, drag, and drop me into an open-source video player or word processor like VLC or TextEdit, respectfully. 

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This/I is/am written in the bottom third, across time. 

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I am also co-authored. 

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This is a part of an interdependent authorship and collaborative praxis. 

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Though framed through a singular perspective, 
I am shaped by a multiplicity of experiences 

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held individually but felt/known together. 

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More broadly, interdependent authorship allows for a specificity of experience 

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while resisting the ways in which public disability disclosure 

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overly invokes a specific, singular, and isolated body. 

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So, please, bear that in mind—but more on that later. 

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This issue is called deaf*. 

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deaf* is a term I started using years ago to describe a/my particular vantage. 

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An alternative to other, less favorable, terms that were provided for me by identity positions that border my own. 

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Through my life those terms have loomed large, serving to intimidate, constrict, foreclose, 

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and otherwise delimit how I might understand myself and others. 

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I started using deaf* to imagine something different, something elsewhere. 

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For me, the asterisk is key. 

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When operationalized, deaf* has been used to describe a multiplicity of non-normative experiences, 

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vantages, and epistemologies in/around aurality, orality, communication, listening, and beyond. 

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It is a term contingent upon elsewheres, excesses, overflows, interstices, and the irreconcilable. 

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deaf* is emergent, speculative, re: generative, and horizontal (of/ towards the sensorium’s horizon). 

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deaf* is used as a descriptor of distinction, positionality, methodology, and the slippages between. 

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This issue touches base with the embodied and experiential—these undergird what deaf*, or any other term worth in/provoking, could/should/would be. 

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This issue turns to artists. 

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This issue responds to a particular moment in contemporary art discourse where d/Disability 

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has never been more present (as a subject matter) and yet its creative and critical methodologies are notably________. 

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Arts institutions are performing surface level access considerations but  

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are seldom (read never) responding to the ways in which art derives much of its value from inaccessibility 

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and its mediums are founded in ableist notions of 
mastery, sensory hierarchy, and possession. 

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This issue begins to chart what a deaf* space could be and what it might offer art in this moment. 

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It does this through sharing personal, lived, and embodied understandings of deaf*ness. 

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The writing and projects in this issue are not definitive or enclosed, rather 

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they chart a space of openings and questions about what deaf* might mean and how it might function. 

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Via artist works/projects, we start to develop a vocabulary of missing information, 

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misunderstanding, and critical illegibility/intelligibility.  

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The issue begins with a roundtable discussion that brings together artists Seo Hye Lee, Rotem Tamir, and Hannah Wallis. 

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They discuss what complications, questions, challenges, and perspectives can/should form a deaf* horizon. 

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While academics dominate and shape the discourse around Deaf and 
Disability Studies we turned intentionally to artists and creatives 

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to explore how deaf* ways of being inform their practice
and their relationship to structures within the art world. 

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These individuals draw upon their embodied experience to articulate and  

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collectively imagine the ways in which deaf*ness pushes against what 
we know about identity, communication, and belonging. 

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Lee, Tamir, and Wallis expand upon each other’s thoughts and experiences and begin to articulate 

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a shared understanding of deaf*ness between them— one with leaky borders, 

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private and creative experiences of sound, and an awareness of the constant pressure to conform. 

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Their modes of communication and sensory experiences are complex and move in, out, and beyond 

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the boundaries of traditional language structures/strictures. 

 

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Margaret Fink, Mirthe Berentsen and Louise Hickman share essays informed by their personal experiences in/around deaf*ness. 

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Their creative writing situates deaf* knowledge in seemingly ordinary moments, 

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being in-between and slipping from one sensory experience to another.  

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These slippages can happen slowly—throughout the course of adolescence and young-adulthood 

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or through incremental ‘advances’ in hearing aid technologies.
 

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Other shifts are more rapid— after giving birth or with the emergence of comorbidities. 

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The continuous reorientation they describe reveals how malleability or instability might be inherent to deaf*ness.  

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Artists JJJJJerome Ellis, Alison O’Daniel, William Pope.L, Jordan Lord and Sarah Browne 

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create works of art informed by cripistemological principles (more on this term later). 

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These artists critically engage disciplinary conventions, 

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challenge audience expectations, and experiment with access and accessibility as material. 

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Through their work, they chart new ways of relating to and enacting art. 

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To invoke and annotate something Derek Jarman wrote at the outset of his book Chroma,  

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“[We] I wrote [have written] this book [issue] in an absence [reflux] of time. 

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If I [We] have overlooked something you hold precious—
write it in the margin [comments].” 

Cite this article as: Liza Sylvestre and Christopher Jones , "Editorial Essay," in VoCA Journal, February 13, 2026, https://journal.voca.network/editorial-essay/.

Copyright 2026 VoCA Journal.

ISSN 2574-0288

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