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The Matter of Disability returns disability to its proper place as
an ongoing historical process of corporeal, cognitive, and sensory
mutation operating in a world of dynamic, even cataclysmic, change.
The book's contributors offer new theorizations of human and
nonhuman embodiments and their complex evolutions in our global
present, in essays that explore how disability might be imagined as
participant in the ""complex elaboration of difference,"" rather
than something gone awry in an otherwise stable process. This
alternative approach to materiality sheds new light on the
capacities that exist within the depictions of disability that the
book examines, including Spider-Man, Of Mice and Men, and
Bloodchild.
In "Cultural Locations of Disability", Sharon L. Snyder and David
T. Mitchell trace how disabled people came to be viewed as
biologically deviant. The eugenics era pioneered techniques that
managed "defectives" through the application of therapies, invasive
case histories, and acute surveillance techniques, turning disabled
persons into subjects for a readily available research pool. In its
pursuit of normalization, eugenics implemented disability
regulations that included charity systems, marriage laws,
sterilization, institutionalization, and even extermination.
Enacted in enclosed disability locations, these practices
ultimately resulted in expectations of segregation from the
mainstream, leaving today's disability politics to focus on
reintegration, visibility, inclusion, and the right of meaningful
public participation. Snyder and Mitchell reveal cracks in the
social production of human variation as aberrancy. From our modern
obsessions with tidiness and cleanliness to our desire to attain
perfect bodies, notions of disabilities as examples of human
insufficiency proliferate. These disability practices infuse more
general modes of social obedience at work today. Consequently, this
important study explains how disabled people are instrumental to
charting the passage from a disciplinary society to one based upon
regulation of the self.
The Matter of Disability returns disability to its proper place as
an ongoing historical process of corporeal, cognitive, and sensory
mutation operating in a world of dynamic, even cataclysmic, change.
The book's contributors offer new theorizations of human and
nonhuman embodiments and their complex evolutions in our global
present, in essays that explore how disability might be imagined as
participant in the "complex elaboration of difference," rather than
something gone awry in an otherwise stable process. This
alternative approach to materiality sheds new light on the
capacities that exist within the depictions of disability that the
book examines, including Spider-Man, Of Mice and Men, and
Bloodchild.
Images of disability pervade language and literature, yet
disability is, as sex was in the Victorian world, the ubiquitous
unspoken topic in today's culture. The twenty-five essays in
Disability Studies provide perspectives on disabled people and on
disability in the humanities, art, the media, medicine, psychology,
the academy, and society.
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