Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective

The article presents a case study on the history of Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) in West Germany from the 1980s to the early 2000s, with a regional focus on the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW). The conceptual framework guiding this study is the question of how the meaning a...

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Main Authors: Jan Müggenburg, Andreas Wagenknecht
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision 2024-12-01
Series:Tijdschrift voor Mediageschiedenis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://account.tmgonline.nl/index.php/up-j-tmgjmh/article/view/895
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author Jan Müggenburg
Andreas Wagenknecht
author_facet Jan Müggenburg
Andreas Wagenknecht
author_sort Jan Müggenburg
collection DOAJ
description The article presents a case study on the history of Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) in West Germany from the 1980s to the early 2000s, with a regional focus on the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW). The conceptual framework guiding this study is the question of how the meaning and individual experience of assistance evolve in conjunction with the technical development and practical use of speech computers. The article sheds light on the interplay between historical contingency and individual socio-technical situatedness of disabled AAC-users. It brings together two disciplinary perspectives in a dialogue based on interviews, published primary sources, and the description of historical hardware and software. Biographical narratives of AAC users in NRW are combined with a media archaeological case study of the institutional and technological formations and developments of AAC in the region. We discuss assistive technologies as a historically variable phenomenon. Assistance is a precarious undertaking that is constantly renegotiated by new technological developments. Each stage of assistive technology has consequences for everyday communication practices and the provision of communicative assistance, creating possibilities and impossibilities for the use of technology. For AAC users, this means that they find themselves in specific constellations that affect both their relationship with the device and their subjective preferences and established routines. We argue that so-called assistive technologies are involved in the co-constitution of disability, and therefore suggest referring to them as ‘assistive media.’
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language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision
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series Tijdschrift voor Mediageschiedenis
spelling doaj-art-8bd4e67fd74146fe8bcee2ce97beec372025-08-20T03:29:35ZengNetherlands Institute for Sound and VisionTijdschrift voor Mediageschiedenis2213-76532024-12-0127212610.18146/tmg.895756Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological PerspectiveJan Müggenburg0Andreas Wagenknecht1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4889-7051Leuphana University LüneburgCharité Universitätsmedizin BerlinThe article presents a case study on the history of Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) in West Germany from the 1980s to the early 2000s, with a regional focus on the state of North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW). The conceptual framework guiding this study is the question of how the meaning and individual experience of assistance evolve in conjunction with the technical development and practical use of speech computers. The article sheds light on the interplay between historical contingency and individual socio-technical situatedness of disabled AAC-users. It brings together two disciplinary perspectives in a dialogue based on interviews, published primary sources, and the description of historical hardware and software. Biographical narratives of AAC users in NRW are combined with a media archaeological case study of the institutional and technological formations and developments of AAC in the region. We discuss assistive technologies as a historically variable phenomenon. Assistance is a precarious undertaking that is constantly renegotiated by new technological developments. Each stage of assistive technology has consequences for everyday communication practices and the provision of communicative assistance, creating possibilities and impossibilities for the use of technology. For AAC users, this means that they find themselves in specific constellations that affect both their relationship with the device and their subjective preferences and established routines. We argue that so-called assistive technologies are involved in the co-constitution of disability, and therefore suggest referring to them as ‘assistive media.’https://account.tmgonline.nl/index.php/up-j-tmgjmh/article/view/895augmentative and alternative communcation (aac)assistanceassistive technologymedia archaeologybiographical analysisassistive mediahistory of computing
spellingShingle Jan Müggenburg
Andreas Wagenknecht
Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
Tijdschrift voor Mediageschiedenis
augmentative and alternative communcation (aac)
assistance
assistive technology
media archaeology
biographical analysis
assistive media
history of computing
title Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
title_full Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
title_fullStr Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
title_short Me and AAC - Alternative and Augmented Communication in West Germany from a Biographical and Media Archaeological Perspective
title_sort me and aac alternative and augmented communication in west germany from a biographical and media archaeological perspective
topic augmentative and alternative communcation (aac)
assistance
assistive technology
media archaeology
biographical analysis
assistive media
history of computing
url https://account.tmgonline.nl/index.php/up-j-tmgjmh/article/view/895
work_keys_str_mv AT janmuggenburg meandaacalternativeandaugmentedcommunicationinwestgermanyfromabiographicalandmediaarchaeologicalperspective
AT andreaswagenknecht meandaacalternativeandaugmentedcommunicationinwestgermanyfromabiographicalandmediaarchaeologicalperspective