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E-raamat: Disability, Culture and Identity

  • Formaat: 222 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317904458
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  • Formaat: 222 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 11-Jun-2014
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317904458
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Disabilities, Culture and Identity is a succinct and accessible presentation of current research on disability, culture and identity. It is an ideal text for students and lecturers alike studying and working in the areas of Disability Studies and Social Policy. Disabilities, Culture and Identity provides a comprehensive and well-structured introduction to an area of growing importance. The authors provide up-to-date and extensive coverage of the development of thinking on cultures of disability, including those relating to people with learning difficulties, people with mental health problems and people with learning difficulties Also covered in detail are critical areas in disability studies including:





Development of the social model of disability Disability and the politics of social justice Disability and theories of culture and media Disability, ethnicity and generation The policy options for empowering disabled people, and how the disabled are empowering themselves The disability arts movement Media treatment of disability
List of contributors x
Preface xii
Acknowledgements xiii
Chapter One Disability, Culture and Identity: Introduction 1(18)
Sheila Riddell
Nick Watson
Introduction
1(1)
The social model of disability and culture
2(3)
What is culture?
5(1)
Culture and disability
6(3)
Disability and identity
9(2)
Structure and content of the book
11(4)
Conclusion
15(1)
References
16(3)
Chapter Two A culture of participation? 19(15)
E. Kay M. Tisdall
'Dependent children'
21(2)
'Troubled adolescents'
23(1)
'Needy disabled people'
24(1)
Defined as 'the other'?
25(4)
Is it possible to have a culture of participation?
29(1)
References
30(4)
Chapter Three Daily denials: The routinisation of oppression and resistance 34(19)
Nick Watson
Introduction
34(1)
The importance of interaction: reclaiming social interaction
35(3)
Prejudice
38(1)
The daily experience of oppression
39(2)
Oppression as patronage and the denial of agency
41(3)
Oppression as the product of charity
44(1)
Becoming the centre of attention
45(2)
Engaging with non-disabled people
47(1)
Oppression as ignorance
48(1)
Conclusion
49(2)
References
51(2)
Chapter Four 'It's like your hair going grey', or is it?: impairment, disability and the habitus of old age 53(14)
Mark Priestley
Introduction
53(1)
Thinking about disability and old age
53(3)
Talking about older disabled people
56(1)
Preoccupation with the body and physical function
57(4)
Biography and identity
61(2)
Older disabled people, same or different?
63(1)
References
64(3)
Chapter Five Challenging a 'spoiled identity': mental health service users, recognition and redistribution 67(21)
Iain Ferguson
Introduction
67(1)
Challenging a 'spoiled identity'
68(1)
Patient
69(2)
Customer
71(1)
User
71(1)
Survivor
72(2)
Client
74(1)
Member
74(1)
Person with the diagnosis
75(1)
Madperson
75(1)
No suitable term
76(1)
Towards a mental health identity?
76(1)
A positive identity?
77(1)
A permanent identity?
78(1)
Social construct or immanent condition?
79(1)
A shared identity?
79(1)
Rethinking identity?
80(4)
Conclusion: the limits of difference
84(2)
References
86(2)
Chapter Six Deafness/Disability-problematising notions of identity, culture and structure 88(17)
Mairian Scott-Hill
Introduction
88(1)
Deaf studies: the structural penetration of culture
89(5)
Disability studies: the cultural penetration of structure
94(5)
Conclusion
99(2)
References
101(4)
Chapter Seven Against a politics of victimisation: disability culture and self-advocates with learning difficulties 105(26)
Danny Goodley
Introduction
105(1)
Disabling and disability cultures
106(2)
Researching self-advocacy
108(1)
Embracing cultures and resilient identities
109(2)
Resilience in the family
111(3)
Identity formation and institutionalisation
114(5)
Disabled identities and self-advocacy culture
119(3)
Self-advocacy and the disability movement
122(4)
Conclusion
126(2)
References
128(3)
Chapter Eight Now I Know Why Disability Art is Drowning in the River Lethe (with thanks to Pierre Bourdieu) 131(12)
Paul Anthony Darke
Introduction
131(1)
The development of Disability Art in the UK
131(3)
Commercial sponsorship of art and Disability Art
134(1)
State sponsorship of Disability Art
134(4)
The domestication of Disability Art and Disability Artists
138(3)
Conclusion
141(1)
References
141(2)
Chapter Nine Mainstreaming disability on Radio 4 143(18)
Brian Sweeney
Sheila Riddell
Introduction
143(2)
Media, power and disability
145(1)
Inclusion, exclusion and mainstreaming
146(1)
Rights, citizenship arid consumerism
147(1)
Production issues
148(7)
Content
155(3)
Conclusion
158(1)
References
159(2)
Chapter Ten Disability and ethnicity: how young Asian disabled people make sense of their lives 161(19)
Karl Atkin
Yasmin Hussain
Introduction
161(1)
Disability and ethnicity
161(1)
The study
162(2)
Negotiating identities
164(1)
The meaning of disability for parents
165(1)
Young people and the family
166(2)
The social meaning of disability
168(1)
Ethnic, cultural and religious identification
169(2)
Religious and cultural identification
171(5)
Discussion
176(1)
References
177(3)
Chapter Eleven Can multiculturalism encompass disability? 180(20)
Andrew Jakubowicz
Helen Meekosha
Introduction
180(2)
Critical multiculturalism and the problem of the able body
182(3)
Australia-a diverse settler society in crisis
185(1)
Culture-the dimension of social meanings
186(2)
Disability as a cultural movement
188(3)
Crossover-disability, multiculturalism and reconciliation
191(2)
Population and the popular: disability engages with multiculturalism
193(4)
Conclusion
197(1)
References
197(3)
Index 200
Riddell, Sheila; Watson, Nick