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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.
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.
For years the subject of human disability has engaged those in the
biological, social and cognitive sciences, while at the same time,
it has been curiously neglected within the humanities. "The Body
and Physical Difference" seeks to introduce the field of disability
studies into the humanities by exploring the fantasies and fictions
that have crystallized around conceptions of physical and cognitive
difference. Based on the premise that the significance of
disabilities in culture and the arts has been culturally vexed as
well as historically erased, the collection probes our society's
pathological investment in human variability and "aberrancy." The
contributors demonstrate how definitions of disability underpin
fundamental concepts such as normalcy, health, bodily integrity,
individuality, citizenship, and morality--all terms that define the
very essence of what it means to be human.
The book provides a provocative range of topics and perspectives:
the absence of physical "otherness" in Ancient Greece, the
depiction of the female invalid in Victorian literature, the
production of tragic innocence in British and American telethons,
the reconstruction of Civil War amputees, and disability as the
aesthetic basis for definitions of expendable life within the
modern eugenics movement. With this new, secure anchoring in the
humanities, disability studies now emerges as a significant strain
in contemporary theories of identity and social marginality.
Moving beyond the oversimplication that disabled people are
marginalized and made invisible by able-ist assumptions and
practices, the contributors demonstrate that representation is
founded upon the perpetual exhibition of humananomalies. In this
sense, all art can be said to migrate toward the "freakish" and the
"grotesque." Such a project paradoxically makes disability the
exception "and" the rule of the desire to represent that which has
been traditionally out-of-bounds in polite discourse.
"The Body and Physical Difference" has relevance across a wide
range of academic specialties such as cultural studies, the
sociology of medicine, history, literature and medicine, the allied
health professions, rehabilitation, aesthetics, philosophical
discourses of the body, literary and film studies, and narrative
theory.
David T. Mitchell is Assistant Professor of English, Northern
Michigan University. Sharon L. Snyder teaches film and literature
at Northern Michigan University.
In the neoliberal era, when human worth is measured by its relative
utility within global consumer culture, selected disabled people
have been able to gain entrance into late capitalist culture. The
Biopolitics of Disability terms this phenomenon "ablenationalism"
and asserts that "inclusion" becomes meaningful only if disability
is recognized as providing modes of living that are alternatives to
governing norms of productivity and independence. Thus, the book
pushes beyond questions of impairment to explore how disability
subjectivities create new forms of embodied knowledge and
collective consciousness. The focus is on the emergence of new
crip/queer subjectivities at work in disability arts, disability
studies pedagogy, independent and mainstream disability cinema
(e.g., Midnight Cowboy), internet-based medical user groups,
anti-normative novels of embodiment (e.g., Richard Powers's The
Echo-Maker) and, finally, the labor of living in "non-productive"
bodies within late capitalism.
"Narrative Prosthesis: Disability and the Dependencies of
Discourse" develops a narrative theory of the pervasive use of
disability as a device of characterization in literature and film.
It argues that, while other marginalized identities have suffered
cultural exclusion due to a dearth of images reflecting their
experience, the marginality of disabled people has occurred in the
midst of the perpetual circulation of images of disability in print
and visual media. The manuscript's six chapters offer comparative
readings of key texts in the history of disability representation,
including the tin soldier and lame Oedipus, Montaigne's "infinities
of forms" and Nietzsche's "higher men," the performance history of
Shakespeare's "Richard III, " Melville's Captain Ahab, the small
town grotesques of Sherwood Anderson's "Winesburg, Ohio" and
Katherine Dunn's self-induced freaks in "Geek Love."
David T. Mitchell is Associate Professor of Literature and Cultural
Studies, Northern Michigan University. Sharon L. Snyder is
Assistant Professor of Film and Literature, Northern Michigan
University.
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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