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Disability Studies Reader 6th edition [Pehme köide]

Contributions by , Associate editor , Edited by (University of Illinois, Chicago, USA)
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 568 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 997 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Apr-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367536072
  • ISBN-13: 9780367536077
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 568 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 997 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Apr-2025
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 0367536072
  • ISBN-13: 9780367536077
Teised raamatud teemal:

Disability studies has gone from being a relatively unknown field to one of increasing importance in the social sciences. The sixth edition of The Disability Studies Reader brings in new topics, scholars, writers, artists, and essays to address links between ableism and imperialism; disability bioethics; and the relationship between disability agency, social policy, and decarceration.

There are as many meanings and experiences of disability as there are disabled people, and this diversity ensures that the work of the field will continue to evolve. Fully revised and brought up to date, this volume addresses a wider range of geographical and cultural contexts, and many pay specific attention to the intersections between disability and race, gender, and sexuality. The growing interest and activism around the issue of neuroatypicality is also reflected in a new section on neurodivergence.

The Disability Studies Reader

remains an excellent touchstone for students in disability studies courses across the disciplines, including the social sciences, English literature, and psychology.

Arvustused

This timely new edition by Davis and Sanchez captures a number of established and, crucially, emerging perspectives in US disability studies. The text constitutes a new key reading for students and researchers alike.

Dan Goodley, Professor of Disability Studies and Education, University of Sheffield

The 6th edition of this ever-evolving and student-friendly text demonstrates the fluidity, complexity, engagements, and energies of both the past and present critical study of disability. New sections on 'key ideas,' 'disability and social policy' and a focus section on 'neurodivergence' sparkle uniquely for this newest edition of what has always been a fundamental text in the field of Disability Studies (for 23 years, since 1997). Like all other editions before it, this one has thoughtful and provocative changes that also then illustrate the unfolding and expanding nature of critical work in our understandings and explorationsboth current and historicalof disability and complex embodiment.

Brenda Jo Brueggemann, Aetna Endowed Chair of Writing, University of Connecticut, Co-editor, Disability Studies Quarterly

The addition for the first time of a co-editor, Deaf and disability studies scholar Rebecca Sanchez, marks the 6th edition as a truly new generation for The Disability Studies Reader. More BIPOC and activist authors, more interdisciplinary and global in scopethis is the edition you want to have on your shelf. A new opening section surveys key ideas in the field, making the Reader more teachable than ever and underscoring that disability studies has arrived.

Mara Mills, Associate Professor of Media, Culture, and Communication and Co-director, NYU Center for Disability Studies

The breadth and depth in this brand-new edition of The Disability Studies Reader offers foundational grounding for approaching the study of disability while at every turn insisting on disabilitys imbrication with race, gender, sexuality, geopolitical movements, and socioeconomic class.

Stephanie L. Kerschbaum, Associate Professor, Department of English, University of Delaware

Now in its 6th edition, The Disability Studies Reader is simultaneously viewed as a dynamic standard-bearer for the field of disability studies and a snapshot of what is happening in the field now. This edition, edited by Lennard Davis and new co-editor Rebecca Sanchez, continues the tradition. The inclusion of more contributions featuring intersectional analysis on disability and race, gender, sexuality, as well as chapters focusing on structural inequities, such as decarceration, makes this new edition a must for disability scholars and campus library collections. Additionally, the section focusing on neurodiversity is an especially compelling and excellent introduction to this area of disability studies for those who are less familiar with this topic. Most importantly, in this time of pandemic and social change, the 6th edition of The Disability Studies Reader functions as a helpful guide to those of us thinking about the future of disability studies education and advocacy.

Teresa Blankmeyer Burke, Professor of Philosophy, Gallaudet University

List of Contributors
xi
Preface xvii
Credits xix
PART I Early Developments Toward a Critical Framework
1(136)
1 Disability, Normality, and Power
3(13)
Lennard J. Davis
2 The Social Model of Disability
16(9)
Tom Shakespeare
3 "Heaven's Special Child": The Making of Poster Children
25(8)
Paul K. Longmore
4 Disability and the Theory of Complex Embodiment: For Identity Politics in a New Register
33(20)
Town Siebers
5 Compulsory Able-Bodiedness and Queer/Disabled Existence
53(10)
Robert Mcruer
6 Deaf Studies in the Twenty-First Century: "Deaf-Gain" and the Future of Human Diversity
63(15)
H-Dirksen L. Bauman
Joseph J. Murray
7 Narrative Prosthesis
78(14)
David Mitchell
Sharon Snyder
8 Unhealthy Disabled: Treating Chronic Illnesses as Disabilities
92(13)
Susan Wendell
9 Disability, Democracy, and the New Genetics
105(14)
Michael Berube
10 My Body, My Closet: Invisible Disability and the Limits of Coming Out
119(18)
Ellen Samuels
PART II Historical Perspectives
137(64)
11 Disabled Upon Arrival: The Rhetorical Construction of Disability and Race at Ellis Island
139(27)
Jay Dolmage
12 First Victims at Last: Disability and Memorial Culture in Holocaust Studies
166(13)
Tamara Zwick
13 Moctezuma's Zoo: Housing Disability in Transatlantic Travel Literature and European Courts
179(12)
Elizabeth B. Bearden
14 Losing Limbs in the Republic: Disability, Dismemberment, and Mutilation in Charles Chesnutt's The Conjure Stories
191(10)
Dennis Tyler Jr.
PART III The Politics of Disability
201(58)
15 Refugee Camps, Asylum Detention, and the Geopolitics of Transnational Migration: Disability and Its Intersections With Humanitarian Confinement
203(18)
Mansha Mirza
16 Folded Time and the Presence of Disability
221(13)
Eunjung Kim
17 Critical Access Studies
234(13)
Aimi Hamraie
18 Whose Disability (Studies)?: Defetishizing Disablement of the Iranian Survivors of the Iran-Iraq War
247(12)
Sona Kazemi
PART IV Theorizing Disability
259(52)
19 Disability Bioethics: From Theory to Practice
261(9)
Rosemarie Garland-Thomson
20 At the Same Time, Out of Time: Ashley X
270(22)
Alison Kafer
21 Mental Health in Kenya: Not Yet Uhuru
292(6)
Mohamed Ibrahim
22 Unspeakable Conversations
298(13)
Harriet Mcbryde Johnson
PART V Identities and Intersectionalities
311(54)
23 Unspeakable Offenses: Untangling Race and Disability in Discourses of Intersectionality
313(15)
Nirmala Erevelles
Andrea Minear
24 A Hybridized Academic Identity: Negotiating a Disability Within Academia's Discourse of Ableism
328(9)
Shahd Alshammari
25 Vegans, Freaks, and Animals: Toward a New Table Fellowship
337(6)
Sunaura Taylor
26 Contextualizing Black Disability and the Culture of Dissemblance
343(4)
Sami Schalk
27 Promise of Cure
347(8)
Eli Clare
28 Doing Disability With Others
355(10)
Rebecca Sanchez
PART VI Disability and Culture
365(40)
29 Blindness and Visual Culture: An Eyewitness Account
367(9)
Georgina Kleege
30 Making Black Madness
376(20)
Theri Pickens
31 Who Is Human?
396(6)
Julie Avril Minich
32 "The Magic Wand"
402(3)
Lynn Manning
PART VII Disability and Social Policy
405(52)
33 Legal Ableism, Interrupted
407(10)
Lydia X.Z. Brown
34 Intersecting Disability, Imprisonment, and Deinstitutionalization
417(15)
Liat Ben-Moshe
35 Reimagining Disability and Inclusive Education
432(12)
Jan Doolittle Wilson
36 Disability as Exception: China, Race, and Human Rights
444(13)
Hentyle Yapp
PART VIII Sixth Edition Featured Section: Neurodivergence
457(73)
37 Understanding Empathy Through a Study of Autistic Life Writing
459(14)
Anna Stenning
38 Involution
473(15)
M. Remi Yergeau
39 A Mad Fight: Psychiatry and Disability Activism
488(17)
Bradley Lewis
40 Defining Mental Disability
505(10)
Margaret Price
41 #BlackAutisticJoy in ADA 30
515(5)
Timotheus "T.J." Gordon Jr.
42 Yale Will Not Save You
520(10)
Esme Weijun Wang
Index 530
Lennard J. Davis is Professor of English, Disability and Human Development, and Medical Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is the sole editor of the Routledge Series Integrating Science and Culture.

Rebecca Sanchez is Associate Professor of English at Fordham University, where she teaches disability studies, transatlantic modernism, and poetics.

Alexander Luft is a visiting lecturer at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He served as a contributing editor to Beginning With Disability: A Primer.