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While the 21st century insulin crisis provokes protest and
political dialogue, public conception of diabetes remain firmly
unchanged. Popular media representations portray diabetes as a
condition couched in lifestyle choices. In the groundbreaking
volume (Un)doing Diabetes, authors destabilize depictions so
powerful, so subtle, and so unquestioned, that readers may find
assertions counterintuitive. (Un)doing Diabetes is the first
collection of essays to use disability studies to explore
representations of diabetes across a wide range of mediums- from
Twitter to TV and film, to theater, fiction, fanfiction, fashion
and more. This disability studies approach to diabetes locates
individual experiences of diabetes within historical and
contemporary social conditions. In undoing diabetes, authors
deconstruct assumptions the public commonly holds about diabetes,
while writers doing diabetes present counter-narratives community
members create to represent themselves. This collection will be of
interest to scholars, activists, caregivers, and those living with
diabetes.
While the 21st century insulin crisis provokes protest and
political dialogue, public conception of diabetes remain firmly
unchanged. Popular media representations portray diabetes as a
condition couched in lifestyle choices. In the groundbreaking
volume (Un)doing Diabetes, authors destabilize depictions so
powerful, so subtle, and so unquestioned, that readers may find
assertions counterintuitive. (Un)doing Diabetes is the first
collection of essays to use disability studies to explore
representations of diabetes across a wide range of mediums- from
Twitter to TV and film, to theater, fiction, fanfiction, fashion
and more. This disability studies approach to diabetes locates
individual experiences of diabetes within historical and
contemporary social conditions. In undoing diabetes, authors
deconstruct assumptions the public commonly holds about diabetes,
while writers doing diabetes present counter-narratives community
members create to represent themselves. This collection will be of
interest to scholars, activists, caregivers, and those living with
diabetes.
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