From the critique of the medical model of disability undertaken
during the early and mid-1990s, a social model emerged,
particularly in the caring professions and those trying to shape
policy and practice for people with disability. In education and
schooling, it was a period of cementing inclusive practices and the
integration and inclusion of disability into mainstream . What was
lacking in the debates around the social model, however, were the
challenges to abledness that were being grappled with in the
routine and pragmatics of self-care by people with disabilities,
their families, carers and caseworkers. Outside the academy, new
forms of activity and new questions were circulating. Challenges to
abledness flourished in the arts and constituted the lived
experience of many disability activists.
Disability Matters engages with the cultural politics of the
body, exploring this fascinating and dynamic topic through the
arts, teaching, research and varied encounters with disability
ranging from the very personal to the professional. Chapters in
this collection are drawn from scholars responding in various
registers and contexts to questions of disability, pedagogy,
affect, sensation and education. Questions of embodiment, affect
and disability are woven throughout these contributions, and the
diverse ways in which these concepts appear emphasize both the
utility of these ideas and the timeliness of their application.
This book was originally published as a special issue of
Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education."
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