Disability Studies

Showing 1 to 25 of 73 results.

Down Syndrome Culture

Life Writing, Documentary, and Fiction Film in Iberian and Latin American Contexts

Looking at Down syndrome representation from a global perspective

Sensing Health

Bodies, Data, and Digital Health Technologies

An exploration of the experience of “health” in the age of the smart watch

Improvising Across Abilities

Pauline Oliveros and the Adaptive Use Musical Instrument

An exploration of the instrument that allows everyone to access artistic practice

Seriously Mad

Mental Distress and the Broadway Musical

Explores the history of American musical theater’s engagement with notions of madness, from Man of La Mancha to A Strange Loop

Ohio under COVID

Lessons from America's Heartland in Crisis

The human story of Covid, from America's bellwether state

The Disabled Child

Memoirs of a Normal Future

How "special needs" parental memoirs contribute to neoliberal and ableist ideologies

Blind in Early Modern Japan

Disability, Medicine, and Identity

A history of the blind in Japan that challenges contemporary notions of disability

Cheap Talk

Disability and the Politics of Communication

How speech has been made cheap to meet the inhuman appetites of capital

Translating Human Rights in Education

The Influence of Article 24 UN CRPD in Nigeria and Germany

How the UN's right to inclusive education has resulted in school segregation for disabled students

Disability and Social Justice in Kenya

Scholars, Policymakers, and Activists in Conversation

The first interdisciplinary and multivocal study of its kind to review achievements and challenges related to the situation of persons with disabilities in Kenya today

Diaphanous Bodies

Ability, Disability, and Modernist Irish Literature

Analyzing the invisible abled body through the work of Joyce, Beckett, Egerton, and Bowen

Sex, Identity, Aesthetics

The Work of Tobin Siebers and Disability Studies

How Tobin Siebers’ foundational work in disability studies resonates in the field today

"Destined to Fail"

Carl Seashore’s World of Eugenics, Psychology, Education, and Music

How eugenics became a keystone of modern educational policy

Embodied Archive

Disability in Post-Revolutionary Mexican Cultural Production

Disability and racial difference in Mexico’s early post-revolutionary period

A History of Disability

with a new foreword by David Mitchell and Sharon Snyder

A bold analysis of the evolution of Western attitudes toward disability

A History of Disability

with a new foreword by David Mitchell and Sharon Snyder

A bold analysis of the evolution of Western attitudes toward disability

Blindness Through the Looking Glass

The Performance of Blindness, Gender, and the Sensory Body

Challenges visuality as the dominant mode through which we understand gender, social performance, and visual culture

HandiLand

The Crippest Place on Earth

Spotlights the heroes and heroines with disabilities in young people’s literature as it also imagines an ideal society for youngsters with disabilities

Vitality Politics

Health, Debility, and the Limits of Black Emancipation

Traces the post-Reconstruction roots of the slow violence enacted on black people in the U.S. through the politicization of biological health

Victorian Bestseller

The Life of Dinah Craik

An engaging, rigorously researched biography of popular 19th century novelist Dinah Craik
 

The Matter of Disability

Biopolitics, Materiality, Crip Affect

Breaks new ground by exploring the limits and transformations of the social model of disability

The Matter of Disability

Materiality, Biopolitics, Crip Affect

Breaks new ground by exploring the limits and transformations of the social model of disability

Monstrous Kinds

Body, Space, and Narrative in Renaissance Representations of Disability

Elucidates how Renaissance writers used monstrosity to imagine what we now call disability