New articles noted with an astersisk*
Preface to the Fourth Edition
PART I: HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVES
Lennard J. Davis
Arguing that the concept of normalcy was invented during the nineteenth-century, this essay explores how both eugenic science and the literary structures of the novel emerged as ways to construct and promote the notion of the "average man."
Douglas Baynton
Discusses how disability is used to justify discrimination against marginalized groups in America, surveying three great citizenship debates of the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: women’s suffrage, African American freedom, and the restriction of immigration.
Paul Longmore
An examination of the history of telethons describing them as cultural mechanisms that display poster children to evoke sympathy and profit. While the child becomes a celebrity in the eyes of the public, he or she also can be construed as an exploited spectacle.
Elizabeth Emens
A consideration of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the more recent ADA Amendments Act (ADAAA in which definitions of disability and impairment narrowed with the ADA and broadened with the ADAAA, The essay speculates on whether the broader vision of disability will survive in the court system. Considering social attitudes and connections between the private and public spheres of American culture and politics, Emens predicts that the courts will ultimately create a narrower definition of disability.
PART II: THE POLITICS OF DISABILITY
Clare Barker and Stuart Murray
An exploration of the intersections of two major critical fields-- Postcolonial Studies and Disability Studies, this essay discovers new approaches to literary and cultural criticism. Realizing that postcolonialism and disability are both tied to questions of power, Barker and Murray assert that Critical Disability Studies "needs to adapt its assumptions and methodologies to include and respond to postcolonial locations of disability".
Ruth Hubbard
This essay presents the problem of prenatal testing in relationship to disability and, while not opposing testing, raises concerns about the discrimination inherent in such interventions.
Marsha Saxton
Saxton alerts readers to the possible conflict between the goals of the abortion rights movement and that of the disability rights movement, and she proposes goals for both that might bring their aspirations in line with one another.
Michael Berube
Does prenatal testing for genetic diseases fit in with our notions of democracy? Would it be in the interests of a democratic culture to promote or restrict the rights of parents to select the child they want, particularly when it comes to disability?
Bradley Lewis
Locates disability activism in the Mad Pride movement that fight for the rights of psychiatric survivors and consumers of mental health services.
Liat Ben-Moshe
This essay analyzes the reality of incarceration through the prism of disability by comparing health institutions to prisons. Both structures house people plagued by psychiatric, intellectual, and physical disabilities, and both also produce either abolitionists, those who are against or escape the system, or Foucauldian docile bodies, those who conform to the system. She suggests the pressing need to expand notions of what comes to be classified as `incarceration’.
PART III: STIGMA AND ILLNESS
Lerita M. Coleman-Brown
Examines Erving Goffman’s key concept of "stigma" from a disability studies perspective.
Susan Wendell
Chronic illness is a major cause of disability, especially in women. Therefore, any adequate feminist understanding of disability must encompass chronic illnesses. Wendell argues that there are important differences between healthy disabled and unhealthy disabled people that are likely to affect such issues as treatment of impairment in disability and feminist politics, accommodation of disability in activism and employment, identifi cation of persons as disabled, disability pride, and prevention and "cure" of disabilities.
PART IV: THEORIZING DISABILITY
Simi Linton
This essay analyzes how language can oppress people with disabilities by creating social, cultural and linguistic expectations and meanings for an ableist society.
Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp
Anthropologists propose a new notion of kinship to see how cultures claim or reject disabled fetuses, newborns and young children.
Ato Quayson
Coining a new term—"aesthetic nervousness"—the Ghanaian scholar theorizes the crisis resulting from the inclusion of disability in literary or dramatic works.
Tom Shakespeare
A description of the social model and a criticism of some aspects of that paradigm.
David Mitchell and Sharon Snyder
The authors develop the idea that narrative requires disability as an essential component of storytelling, particularly so the plot can fix or cure the impairment.
Argues that postmodernism has failed to deconstruct the schizophrenic, keeping a monolithic view based on some canonical writings rather than seeing the schizophrenic as part of a new emerging group that is active, multivocal, and seeking to fight for their rights.
H-Dirksen L. Baumann and Joseph J. Murray
This essay provides an overview of the field of Deaf Studies as it has emerged in the latter part of the 20th century, and then provides a new rhetorical frame for future directions that this field may take in the 21st century, the cultural attitude shifting from "hearing loss" to "Deaf-gain". "Deaf-Gain" provides a rationale for the positive side of sign language and the continuing existence of Deaf culture.
PART V: IDENTITIES AND INTERSECTIONALITIES
Lennard J. Davis
Argues that postmodern ideas of identity challenge the existent models in disability studies and argues that since disability is a shifting identity that newer paradigms are needed to explain it.
Tobin Siebers
Using the ideas of post-positivist realism, Siebers argues that disability is a valid and actual identity as opposed to a deconstructive-driven model.
Margaret Price
The contested boundaries between disability, illness, and mental illness are discussed in terms of mental disability. Ultimately, Price argues that higher education would benefit from practices that create a more accessible academic world for those who may have able bodies but disabled minds. The excerpt included here explores the confines of naming and defining Mental Disability, offering a biographical account of the author’s academic journey.
Josh Lukin
Lukin provides a short history of the intersection of blackness and disability, highlighting the experiences of Johnnie Lacy and Donald Galloway who were members of the Berkeley Center for Independent Living in the 1960s. The essay traces a theme of black involvement and yet exclusion from disability activism. It also moves into the current moment and follows some of the recent scholarship in the field.
Ellen Samuels
This essay discusses the coming-out discourse in the context of a person whose physical appearance does not immediately signal a disability Considering the complicated dynamics inherent in the analogizing of social identities, the politics of visibility and invisibility, and focusing on two "invisible" identities of lesbian-femme and nonvisible disability, Samuels "queers" disability in order to develop new paradigms of identity, representation, and social interaction.
Rosemarie Garland-Tomson
This essay applies the insights of disability studies to feminist theory.
Nirmala Erevelles and Andrea Minear
Erevelles and Minear draw on narratives exemplifying the intersections between race, class, gender, and disability. Through the stories of Eleanor Bumpurs, Junius Wilson, and Cassie and Aliya Smith, the margins of multiple identity categories are placed at the forefront, outlining how and why individuals of categorical intersectionality are constituted as non-citizens and (no)bodies by the very social institutions (legal, educational, and rehabilitational) that are designed to protect, nurture, and empower them.
Robert McRuer
This essay points to the mutually reinforcing nature of heterosexuality and able-bodiedness, arguing that disability studies might benefit by adopting some of the strategies of queer theory.
Jasbir Puar
Puar argues for a deconstruction of what ability and disability mean and pushes for a broader politics of capacity and debility that puts duress on the seamless production of able bodies in relation to disability. Examining the recent "It Gets Better" campaign against queer youth suicide, Puar links suicide to forms of slow death, asking which bodies are able to capitalize on their vulnerabilities in neoliberalism and which are not.
PART VI: DISABILITY AND CULTURE
Cynthia Barounis
Using the two films as examples, the essay argues that disability in one is normalized by depicting disabled athletes as hyper-masculine while homosexuality in the other is invested with values of able-bodiedness.
Ann Millett-Gallant
How does Alison Lapper’s monumental self-portrait statue of her pregnant, non-nomative, nude body fit into the history and culture of public art?
David Hevey
Georgina Kleege
Thomas G. Couser
Joseph N. Straus
This essay presents an innovative way of thinking about disability as disjuncture and the significant role that design and branding play in creating this ill-fit. DePoy and Gilson assert that design and branding provide the contemporary opportunity and relevant strategies for rethinking disability and social change, healing notions of disjuncture in the postmodern and post-postmodern world of disability studies.
PART VII: FICTION, MEMOIR, AND POETRY
Eli Clare
A memoir that explores the way the author’s disability, queer identity, and memories of childhood sexual abuse intersect with and thread though one another.
Harriet McBryde Johnson
An account by the late disabled writer who meets and argues with utilitarian philosopher Peter Singer, himself an advocate for withdrawing life support from severely disabled people.
Anne Finger
A dreamlike account of being disabled as a child and imagining a romantic movie starring Helen Keller and Frieda Kahlo.
Cheryl Marie Wade
Poems that explore issues of identity and self-definition from a disabled perspective.
Poem that explores the nature and meanings of beauty.
Steve Kuusisto
Memoir by the poet/writer of being a teenage boy with limited eyesight and an expansive imagination.
James Ferris
This selection includes twelve previously unpublished poems by distinguished poet and disability studies scholar.
Lennard J. Davis is Professor of Disability and Human Development, English, and Medical Education at the University of Illinois at Chicago. He is the author of, among other works, Enforcing Normalcy: Disability, Deafness, and the Body; Bending Over Backwards: Disability, Dismodernism, and Other Difficult Positions; My Sense of Silence: Memoirs of a Childhood with Deafness; and Obsession: A History.
Lennard Davis’s Disability Studies Reader has been a must-use for
years in my courses on disability studies and medical humanities.
The newest edition provides further proof of its importance for the
classroom. Yet more wide ranging and global, it provides not only
solid historical essays but think-pieces about disabilities in the
modern world. It is in many ways a course in a box.--Sander L.
Gilman, Distinguished Professor of the Liberal Arts and Sciences,
Professor of Psychiatry, Emory University With the inclusion and
integration of the humanities in medical education, every edition
of The Disability Studies Reader has been crucial in developing
curricular "interventions" that introduce students to the fluid
construction of normalcy, the common representations of disability,
and the ethical, moral, and political issues associated with
accepted diagnostic and clinical practices. The essays on mental
health/mental illness, pre-natal genetic screening, chronic illness
and gender, race and depression, and cognitive disorders in this
fourth edition will enable teachers like myself to offer medical
students other ways of thinking, seeing and relating to their
future patients. -- Therese Jones,. Director, Arts and Humanities
in Healthcare Program. University of Colorado Anschutz Medical
Campus, Editor, Journal of Medical Humanities With every new
edition, Lennard Davis's Disability Studies Reader becomes more
pertinent and more necessary. If you are wondering what disability
studies is, start here. - Tobin Siebers, Department of English,
University of Michigan As the interdisciplinary field of
disability studies continues to transform our understandings of
culture, history, and politics, The Disability Studies Reader
remains the touchstone. The new edition pairs the indispensable
essays that have founded the field with cutting-edge work in
feminist, queer, critical race, and postcolonial theory. This is
one of the most important volumes in cultural studies available. -
Robert McRuer, English, George Washington University No one serious
about the subject can afford to be without the latest edition of
the Disability Studies Reader on their shelf. From politics to
poetry, memoir to theory, poster children to posthumans, it is the
one indispensable guide to the field for student and scholar
alike. - Douglas Baynton, History, University of Iowa
Since its first appearance the Disability Studies Reader has always
been an indispensible volume - but with the new, fourth edition
this is even more the case. The new additions here - on
intersections with sexuality, technology, the law, questions of the
social, and the need to understand disability in global contexts -
speak to the evolving ways in which disability works in the
contemporary world. It is very rare that a single text can do
justice to a highly complex subject, but this book does just that.
It is the essential guide for scholars and students. - Stuart
Murray, Contemporary Literatures and Film Director, Leeds Centre
for Medical Humanities "This is an indispensable collection,
bringing together foundational arguments in disability studies and
provocative new work from emerging young scholars in the field. If
you're curious as to why (and how) disability studies has
stimulated so much debate in the humanities, The Disability Studies
Reader is a great place to start finding out."
--Michael Bérubé, Paterno Family Professor in Literature, Penn
State University "There is simply no area of contemporary life-- be
it medical, economic, educational, juridical, athletic,
architectural, culinary, recreation, entertainment--that goes
unaddressed in the disability studies literature. Just when you
thought that there was nothing new to say about social
construction, difference, the performative, the universal, the
particular and the body, disability studies comes along to
demonstrate both the theoretical and practical urgencies to which
these and other too often abstract terms really refer. If you've
been hearing about disability studies, but didn't quite know what
to make of it, this is the anthology for you."
--Stanley Fish, Davidson-Kahn Distinguished University Professor of
Humanities and Law, Florida International University "A classic
just got even better! Only a few disciplines can claim a founding
text. For disability studies, with its far-reaching implications
for other fields, this is it. It all starts--and re-starts in a
superb second edition--right here."
--David B. Morris, author of The Culture of Pain "This revised
edition demonstrates the significant evolution of the field.
Greater attention to such vital issues as globalization, gender,
critical race studies, and cultural constructions appear in cogent
new essays that enhance and complement the collection. As with the
original Disability Studies Reader , this edition challenges its
readers with pioneering studies of theoretical models and the
politics of disability.
--Susan Burch, author of Signs of Resistance: American Deaf
Cultural History, 1900 to World War II "This collection of
scholarly essays strikes at the concept of normalcy and touches us
on both personal and societal levels. From an academic perspective,
the field of disability studies broadens our race, class, and
gender discussions to include layers of identity and moments of
connection. The Disability Studies Reader challenges us to
reexamine human difference."
--I. King Jordan, President, Gallaudet University --This text
refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
"The Disability Studies Reader edited by Lennard J. Davis is to the
field of Disability Studies what the Norton anthologies are to
literature. It is in fact, canon-making. The fourth edition of the
reader has just been released in February. It will—and should
be—mandatory is every disability studies program in the United
States. Those trailblazers whose work remains from the previous
editions will continue to gain cultural currency and those writers
whose work is being admitted for the first time know they will now
be read by students across the country." — Michael Northen,
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