DISABILITY STUDIES:
INFORMATION AND RESOURCES
Edited and Compiled by
Steven Taylor, Bonnie Shoultz, and Pamela Walker
With contributions by
Jagdish Chander, Beth Ferri, Perri Harris, Lori Lewin,
Michael Schwartz, Zach Rosetti, Julia White, and Rachael Zubal-Ruggieri
November 2003
Listing of Academic Programs Updated April 2009
Preparation of this information package was supported in part by the U.S.
Department of Education, Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services,
National Institute on Disability and Rehabilitation Research (NIDRR), under
Contract No. No. H133A990001 awarded to the National Resource Center on Supported
Living and Choice, Center on Human Policy, School of Education, Syracuse University.
The opinions expressed within are those solely of the authors, and no official
endorsement by the U.S. Department of Education is inferred. The Center
on Human Policy would like to thank Ellen Blasiotti, Project Officer, NIDRR,
for her support and assistance.
DISABILITY STUDIES: INFORMATION AND RESOURCES
Table of Contents
Disability Studies refers generally to the examination of disability as
a social, cultural, and political phenomenon. In contrast to clinical, medical,
or therapeutic perspectives on disability, Disability Studies focuses on how
disability is defined and represented in society. From this perspective, disability
is not a characteristic that exists in the person so defined, but a construct
that finds its meaning in social and cultural context.
Disability Studies is a vibrant and diverse “field” or “area of inquiry.”
First of all, it is interdisciplinary and multi-disciplinary. No single academic
discipline can place a claim on Disability Studies. Rather, the field is informed
by scholarship from such different disciplines as history, sociology, literature,
political science, law, policy studies, economics, cultural studies, anthropology,
geography, philosophy, theology, gender studies, communications and media
studies, and the arts.
Second, Disability Studies covers an incredibly diverse group of people.
People who are blind, deaf, use wheelchairs, have chronic pain, learn at a
slower pace than other people, and so on have vastly different experiences
and perspectives. Does it make sense to lump such different human beings under
a simple category such as disability? It does—not because they are the same
in any biological or philosophical sense, but because society has placed
them in this category, with consequences for how they are viewed and treated
by the majority presumed to be nondisabled.
Finally, it is usually easier to define what Disability Studies is not
(not medicine, rehabilitation, special education, physical or occupational
therapy, and professions oriented toward the cure, prevention, or treatment
of disabilities) than to specify what it is. Although Disability Studies
scholars generally subscribe to the “minority group model” of disability—the
view that the status of people as a minority shapes their experiences in
society, they agree on little else. For example, some scholars view disability
in terms of culture and identity, while others see disability as a label
and a social construct.
Scholars even use different language to refer to the people at the center
of inquiry in Disability Studies. “Disabled person” is used to draw attention
to the centrality of disability in individual identity; “person with a disability”
or “people first language” conveys the idea that having a disability is secondary
to the people’s identity as human beings; “person labeled disabled” (mentally
retarded, mentally ill, and so on) focuses on how disability is a socially
constructed definition imposed on people. Within sub-groups, minor variations
in language and spelling can carry tremendous significance. Thus, “deaf person”
and “Deaf person” mean very different things, with the latter emphasizing
membership in a culture defined linguistically.
This information package reflects the diversity of the field of Disability
Studies. We have included contributions representing different disability
groups, perspectives, and disciplines.
The information package is divided into nine sections. The first contains
annotations and listings of books, chapters, and articles. Practically every
week a new writing related to Disability Studies is published. It is almost
impossible to keep up with scholarship in this area. In preparing these annotations
and listings, we have undoubtedly overlooked important work. An omission of
a book, chapter, and article does not necessarily mean that we think it does
not belong. It likely means we did not come across it or forgot about it.
In addition, although we tried to annotate what we see as the most important
contributions in Disability Studies, some readings on the non-annotated
list warrant serious attention. As with any writing project, at some
point you need to “get it out the door.”
The next section includes annotations and a listing of films and documentaries.
As in the case of the readings, these are not intended to be comprehensive.
The following section contains a list, with a general description and contact
information, of academic programs in Disability Studies in North America.
Of course, Disability Studies scholarship is not limited to North America.
Academic programs can be found in the United Kingdom and other countries.
Since we are located in North America, information on programs in the
United States and Canada is most readily accessible to us. In a future version
of this package, we might attempt to identify programs on other continents.
Before reviewing this list of academic programs, readers should consult
our criteria for inclusion. The list is confined to colleges and universities
that offer formal degrees, minors, majors, certificates, or concentrations
in Disability Studies. Many other universities and colleges offer courses
on Disability Studies or host relevant research institutes and conferences.
We did not attempt to identify these in this listing.
The next five sections contain information on periodicals, special or feature
issues of periodicals, organizations, special interest groups of professional
or academic associations, and Internet resources.
In the final section of this information package, we make suggestions of
books and readings on Disability Studies that can be used in courses in various
academic disciplines.
If we have overlooked any writings, films, programs, organizations, or
resources in preparing this information package, we would appreciate it if
readers brought these to our attention. Although this package is dated November
2003 to reflect when formatting and editing were completed, most of the listings
were finalized in summer 2003.
Steven J. Taylor, Ph.D.
Director, Center on Human Policy
Professor, Cultural Foundations of Education
Coordinator, Disability Studies
Syracuse University
DISABILITY STUDIES BOOKS, CHAPTERS, AND ARTICLES
Annotated Books, Chapters, and Articles
The following section is comprised of selected Disability Studies books,
chapters, and articles. They are across disciplines, and a large amount of
them are edited books that cover a variety of topics, including disability
rights, identity politics, cultural studies and disability, social perspectives
on disability, and perspectives of people with disabilities. Also included
are a number of fictional pieces and poetry. For other resources, following
this listing is a separate section on autobiographies and personal narratives,
a selection of classics from one Disability Studies scholar’s perspective,
and a bibliography of titles that we were unable to include either due to
time constraints or space limitations.
Albrecht, G. L., Seelman, K. D., & Bury, M. (Eds.). (2001).
Handbook of Disability Studies. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
This volume includes contributions from an international, multidisciplinary
set of Disability Studies scholars. It is divided into three sections: the
shaping of Disability Studies as a field; experiencing disability; and disability
in context. Each section contains chapters addressing conceptual, theoretical,
methodological, practice, and policy issues. Overall, the intent of the book
is to organize existing knowledge within Disability Studies, highlight tensions
and debates within the field, and point to future research and practice needs.
It is a comprehensive resource, which will be of use to disability activists,
scholars, and policy makers.
Barnartt, S., & Scotch, R. (2001). Disability protests: Contentious
politics, 1970-1999. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
This book presents an analysis of contentious political action within the
deaf and disability communities. The authors note that within scholarly examinations
of social movements, there is almost no literature addressing the deaf or
disability movements. This book is intended to fill that gap, through analysis
of actual protest events. In examination of protests, the authors discuss
the history of collection action, various aspects of protests (e.g., cross
disability and impairment-specific), the effects of protests, and the future
of such political action.
Barnes, C., & Mercer, G. (2003). Disability [Key Concepts].
Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Drawing from international literature and a range of disciplinary perspectives,
Barnes and Mercer explore the evolution of the concept of disability. The
book highlights the exclusion and marginalization of disabled people across
different historical and cultural contexts, such as family life and reproduction,
education, employment, leisure, cultural imagery, and politics. Disability
is discussed in relation to social oppression, similar to that experienced
by women, minority ethnic and racial groups, and lesbians and gay men. Key
issues addressed include: theorizing disability; historical and comparative
perspectives; experiencing impairment and disability; professional and policy
intervention in the lives of disabled people; disability politics, social
policy, and citizenship; and disability culture.
Barnes, C., Mercer, G., & Shakespeare, T. (1999). Exploring
disability: A sociological introduction. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
This book provides an introduction to the Sociology of Disability. The
authors trace the history of sociological theorizing on disability and chronic
illness and pay special attention to the British “social model of disability”
that emerged in the late 1980s and 1990s. As noted by the authors, the social
model of disability is a political account of disability grounded in the experiences
of disabled people and activists, rather than a sociological framework. The
authors review literature and policies on disability in both the United Kingdom
and North America. The book would be a useful introductory text in Sociology
of Disability, Disability Studies, and Disability Policy courses.
Barnes, C., Oliver, M., & Barton, L. (Eds.). (2002). Disability
studies today. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
The book compiles the works of some of the leading scholars of Disability
Studies from the UK, USA and Canada. The contributors include Paul Abberley,
Gary L. Albrecht, Colin Barnes, Len Barton, Peter Beresford, Anne Borsay,
Harlan Hahn, Chris Holden, Bill Hughes, Phil Lee, Geof Mercer, Mike Oliver,
Marcia H. Rioux, John Swain, Carol Thomas and Ayesha Vernon.
This textbook presents an analysis of the issues in Disability Studies
primarily in the context of Britain and the United States, while contributors
like Chris Holden and Peter Beresford (Chapter 10) and Marcia H. Rioux (Chapter
11) present issues in the context of globalization. Other main topics covered
in the book include: the history of the development of Disability Studies
in Britain and America; key ideas, issues and thinkers; the role of the body;
divisions and hierarchies; history, power and identity; work, politics and
the disabled peoples' movement; human rights, research and the role of the
academy.
Baynton, D. C. (1996). Forbidden signs: American culture and the
campaign against sign language. Chicago: University Of Chicago Press.
Douglas C. Baynton, an assistant professor of history and American Sign
Language at the University of Iowa, has produced a rich history of the varied
and sundry attempts that have been made to oppress the use of sign language.
The book touches upon the cultural aspects of deafness and presents an interesting
study of American cultural history with reference to the difference in perception
of hearing people like Alexander Graham Bell and deaf people who asserted
for their right to use sign language. Through a very powerful narrative, “Baynton
places this struggle between the 'manualists' and the 'oralists' into its
very broadest cultural context, seeking to offer fresh perspectives on the
shifting ways in which Americans have conceptualized human history and American
identity, nature and human nature…” (Journal of American History
, September 1997).
Biklen, D. (1988). The myth of clinical judgment. Journal of Social
Issues, 44(1), 127-140.
This article challenges the primacy of professional decision-making and
argues that clinical decisions are influenced by other factors such as economics,
bureaucratic exigency, politics, service traditions, and societal prejudice.
Blatt, B., & Kaplan, F. (1974). Christmas in purgatory: A photographic
essay on mental retardation. Syracuse, NY: Human Policy Press.
This is a reprinted edition of Blatt and Kaplan's 1966 photographic exposé
of conditions in America's institutions. Shot with a hidden camera,
Christmas in Purgatory depicts overcrowded and dehumanizing conditions
found at eight institutions in the Northeast. Blatt was one of the few professionals
to speak out against institutional warehousing in the 1960s.
Bogdan, R. (1988). Freak show: Presenting human oddities for amusement
and profit. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
A social history of the depiction of "human oddities," including people
with disabilities, for amusement and profit, Freak Show is
a classic study of depictions of disability in popular culture.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S. J. (1989). Relationships with severely disabled
people: The social construction of humanness. Social Problems, 36
(2), 135-148.
The authors discuss how nondisabled people define their caring and accepting
relationships with people with severe disabilities. The authors frame their
discussion around a sociology of acceptance and identify four dimensions which
maintain humanness of the people with severe disabilities: attributing thinking
to the other, seeing individuality in the other, viewing the other as reciprocating,
and defining social place for the other.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S. J. (1994). The social meaning of mental
retardation: Two life stories. New York: Teachers College Press.
The concept of mental retardation is challenged through life histories
based on in-depth interviews with former inmates of institutions for people
labeled retarded. The authors argue that mental retardation is not a real
entity, but rather a social construction.
Braddock, D. (Ed.). (2002). Disability at the dawn of the 21st Century
and the state of the states. Washington, DC: American Association
on Mental Retardation.
This fifth edition is the most extensive edition of The State of the States
volumes. It is divided into three parts. Part I explores the historical basis
of disability services, based on a cross-disability perspective. Part I also
includes a cross-disability empirical study of public financial support for
disability in the United States, across federal, state, and local levels,
and across mental and physical disability categories. Part II presents updated
state-by-state profiles, which examine programmatic structure and financing
of mental retardation/developmental disabilities services. Emerging trends
and issues are identified, including aging family caregivers, class action
litigation with regard to waiting lists for residential services, and the
growth of the Medicaid Home and Community Based Services Waiver. Part III
is an in-depth comparative study of the development of institutional and community
services in two states: Michigan and Illinois.
Bragg, L. (2001). Deaf world: A historical reader and primary sourcebook.
New York: New York University Press.
This is a comprehensive anthology of Deaf history and culture. It
includes several chapters on race and gender.
Brueggemann, B. J. (1999). Lend me your ear: Rhetorical constructions
of deafness. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Weaving personal narrative with critical analysis, Brueggemann explores
the social construction of deafness through a variety of discursive practices.
The book explores issues of passing as well as Deaf identity, culture, and
the rhetorics of silence.
Burch, S. (2002). Signs of resistance: American Deaf cultural
history, 1900 to 1942. New York: New York University Press.
Historians have assumed that the triumph of oralism was total, but Susan
Burch aims in her book to debunk that assumption by showing that deaf students,
teachers, and staff in the schools for the deaf consistently and creatively
subverted oralist policies and goals within the schools. Burch’s main
argument is that the strenuous efforts of oralists to assimilate deaf children
resulted in strengthening the children’s ties to a separate Deaf cultural
community. In her book, Burch, a professor of history at Gallaudet University,
reinterprets early 20th-century history of the deaf community. Using
community sources such as deaf newspapers, memoirs, films, and interviews
with deaf people, Burch demonstrates how the deaf community mobilized against
the oralist onslaught, defended its language, became more and more politically
conscious, and clarified its cultural values. In this struggle, a collective
deaf consciousness, identity, and political organization arose.
Campbell, J., & Oliver, M. (1996). Disability politics: Understanding
our past, changing our future. London and New York: Routledge.
This book uses the voices of disabled people to describe the changes in
the disability sector in Britain as a result of the social movement of disabled
people, particularly in the 1970s to mid 1990s. According to the authors,
“the book is based upon the ethnographic and action research traditions” (p.
25) and “is a mixture of social theory, political history, action research,
individual biography and personal experience” (p. 1). This work is regarded
to be a significant contribution to history, social theory and policy, and
political studies. The book clearly traces the emergence and survival of the
disability movement and provides an honest evaluation of its successes and
failures. It then goes on to consider possible future directions for disabled
people in 21st century Britain. It is great contribution to the promotion
of the understanding of the disability movement in Britain.
Charlton, J. I. (1998). Nothing about us without us: Disability oppression
and empowerment. Berkeley: University of California Press.
The author uses a disability rights standpoint to discuss the international
oppression of people with disabilities. He provides a theoretical framework
for understanding disability oppression not as something that has come from
the attitudes of people without disabilities, but because of systems and structures
of oppression from which these attitudes stem. He uses interviews with disability
rights activists from around the world to back his argument.
Clare, E. (1999). Exile & pride: Disability, queerness, and liberation.
Cambridge, MA: South End Press.
“Gender reaches into disability; disability wraps around class; class strains
against abuse; abuse snarls into sexuality; sexuality folds on top of race…everything
finally piling into a single human body. To write about any aspect of identity,
any aspect of the body, means writing about this entire maze. This I know,
and yet the question remains: where to start?” (p. 123)
Eli Clare investigates disability, class, queerness, child sexual abuse,
and conflicting political and environmental awarenesses, using the metaphors
of landscape and her own experience. She recalls and brings to life images
of the mountains and forests, rivers and oceans of her childhood in rural
Oregon, her body, and her many homes, in these musings on home, exile, politics
and experience.
Corker, M. (1998). Disability discourse in a postmodern world. In
T. Shakespeare (Ed.), Disability Studies reader: Social science perspectives
(pp. 221-233). London & New York, NY: Cassell.
Argues for a discursive approach for understanding deafness and disability.
Corker, M., & Shakespeare, T. (Eds.). (2002). Disability/postmodernity:
Embodying disability theory. New York: Continuum.
This collection of 17 essays from leading scholars around the world applies
the analysis of postmodernity to Disability Studies in hopes of bridging social
science perspectives and humanities perspectives on disability. Recognizing
that the global experience of disability is far too complex to be limited
by one set of ideas, the editors attempt to build on the social model of disability,
in essence “thinking globally and acting locally at the same time.” While
the theory advances to the next level, the goal remains the same: to achieve
inclusive communities and “to contribute to the emancipation of disabled
people, whoever they are, and whatever they decide that emancipation means.”
Loosely organized into three sections, the volume begins with an exploration
of theoretical perspectives, including concepts of difference, identity,
and the body. It follows with a focus on culture and disability and ends
by delving into social practice, inspiring us all to ponder what it will
take to realize inclusive societies.
Couser, G. T. (1997). Recovering bodies: Illness, disability,
and life writing. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
Literary analysis of the ever-growing genre and subgenre of personal narratives
of disability and illness.
Crutchfield, S., & Epstein, M. (Eds.). (2003). Points of contact:
Disability, art and culture [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability].
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Overview of the role of art in the social construction of disability. Also
explores counter images of disability in art that resist or talk back to conventional
portrayals.
Davis, L. J. (1995). Enforcing normalcy: Disability, deafness,
and the body. London & New York: Verso.
A critical and historical analysis of the construction of normalcy. Includes
a chapter interrogating disability and the female nude and concludes with
a cogent argument for why disability must be included in the usual triad of
gender, race and class.
Davis, L. J. (Ed.). (1997). The Disability Studies reader.
New York: Routledge.
This edited reader is a collection of classic and new essays, as well as
fiction and poetry, in the field of Disability Studies. This perspective places
disability in a political, social, and cultural context that theorizes the
construction of disability in this society. The authors address such areas
as feminist theories of disability, the construction of deafness, and disability
as metaphor. The book is divided into seven sections, including historical
perspectives, politics of disability, stigma and illness, gender and disability,
disability and education, disability and culture, and fiction and poetry.
This is progressive reading, but it should be of note that it is traditional
in the sense that Disability Studies translates to “physical Disability Studies”
and there is little mention of developmental disability.
Davis, L. J. (2002). Bending over backwards: Disability, dismodernism
& other difficult positions [Cultural Front]. New York: New York
University Press.
This is a book of essays focusing on themes related to disability identity
and Disability Studies. He notes the silence regarding disability identity
versus other identities such as race, gender, or sexual orientation.
He argues that instability of the disability category can be the beginning
of a new way of thinking about all identity categories. As he states, “The
dismodern era ushers in the concept that difference is what all of us have
in common. That identity is not fixed but malleable.” Essays in the book illustrate
the key role that Disability Studies can play in terms of cultural criticism
and theory.
Deutsch, H., & Nussbaum, F. (Eds.). (2000). “Defects”: Engendering
the modern body [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann Arbor:
University of Michigan Press.
Organized around three broad topics: disability, monstrosity, and imperfections,
the collection examines the cultural construction of dis/ability during the
early modern and Enlightenment periods. The final chapter by Kaplan troubles
feminism’s historical grounding in the rhetoric of liberal individualism and
autonomy.
Eiesland, N. (1997). The disabled God: Toward a liberation theology
of disability. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
Through this book, Eiesland, who became disabled as a child when she had
polio, helps the reader to see how the “hidden history” of conventional bodies
living ordinary lives with grace and dignity, disgust and illusion, can make
for both a theological and pastoral contribution. Arguing for a liberation
theology, she calls on us to move away from our defining of people with disabilities
as people who need to adjust to a minority group that is subject to social
stigmatization. While her examples tend to be based on the experiences of
people with physical disabilities, what she has to say also is insightful
for those working to include people with developmental disabilities in faith
communities.
Fawcett, B. (2000). Feminist perspectives on disability.
London: Pearson Education.
Illustrates the parallels between Disability Studies and feminist theory,
as well as possibilities of a feminist poststructuralist approach to the study
of impairment and disability.
Ferguson, P. (1994). Abandoned to their fate: Social policy and practice
toward severely retarded people in America, 1820-1920 [Health, Society,
and Policy Series]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
A historical study of social policy and practice toward people labeled
"idiots" or "severely retarded." Ferguson examines the problem of "chronicity"
and shows how people with the most severe disabilities have been and continue
to be excluded from reform movements.
Ferguson, R. J. (2001, July). We know who we are: A history of the
blind in challenging educational and socially constructed policies--A study
in policy archeology [Critical Concerns in Blindness Series, No. 1].
San Francisco: Caddo Gap Press.
Most of the academic works dealing with the history of education of blind
people and the social policies related to the field of blindness in the last
century were written by the people who worked within the “blindness system”
and/or were sympathetic to its interests. This book is a rare academic work
of its kind that provides a different perspective in order to show the conflicts
that the organized blind encountered with the professional culture of the
blindness system and their efforts to create educational policies for the
blind instead of in conjunction with the blind. By using “policy archaeology”
as a framework, the author has made a good attempt to write a history, from
the perspective of the organized blind, of their struggle against discrimination
as the result of educational and social policies created by professionals
in the area of blindness.
The author describes the nature of the conflicts and issues raised by the
organized blind in their pursuit of having their voice heard in educational
policy decisions related to themselves.
Fine, M., & Asch, A. (Eds.). (1988). Women with disabilities:
Essays in psychology, culture, and politics [Health, Society, and
Policy Series]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Fine and Asch, the editors of this volume, have for a number of years been
involved in examining what it means to be a woman with a disability in today’s
society. Their early conceptualization of the problems facing women with disabilities
has been very influential in the field. This comprehensive, edited collection
addresses a wide range of issues that are critical in the lives of women
with disabilities. The chapters are organized in three categories: “Bodies
and Images,” “Disabled Women in Relationships,” and “Policy and Politics.”
In a lengthy introduction, Asch and Fine review past work on the subject and
point toward future exploration. The editors also close the book with an
epilogue entitled, “Research and Politics to Come.” Like all collections of
essays, the quality is uneven. Taken together, however, this is an important
collection, covering a broad range of critical issues. For example, the volume
addresses issues relating to women with developmental disabilities, a group
that has traditionally been neglected in volumes on women with disabilities.
Other critical issues dealt with include: disability and ethnicity,
the moral dilemma between reproductive rights and disability rights, a discussion
about girls with disabilities, and an analysis of the exclusion of women with
disabilities from the women’s movement. This is a book that everyone interested
in the lives and experiences of women with disabilities should read.
Fries, K. (1995, September/October). Cross-cultured. Disability Rag
& Resource, 47-48.
Fries explores what it is like to be both disabled and gay, to be in the
minority in each of his communities and the interesting intersections in how
a disabled gay man is viewed. He gives the example of how gay men are viewed
by non-gay people as sex-obsessed, while disabled men are stereotyped as
asexual. On the other hand, one of the major problems he and others face is
lack of presence if not invisibility. He asks editors and producers, in particular,
to recognize the gay disabled man as a character and a reader/viewer.
Fries, K. (Ed.). (1997). Staring back: The disability experience
from the inside out. New York: Plume.
This book, edited by Kenny Fries, explores the experience of disability
through writings by contributors who have disabilities. The collection includes
nonfiction, poetry, fiction, and drama by such authors as Nancy Mairs, John
Hockenberry, Anne Finger, Adrienne Rich, Mark O’Brien, and Marilyn Hacker.
Each chapter explores disability not as something that limits one’s life,
but as an experience all its own. Fries considers the theme of this edited
book as one of human connection, “connection with the past, connection with
one another, connection with our bodies, connection with ourselves.”
Garland-Thomson, R. (1994). Redrawing the boundaries of feminist Disability
Studies. Feminist Disability Studies, 20(3), 583-597.
In this review essay, Rosemarie Garland-Thomson argues for the recognition
of feminist Disability Studies within feminism. She states that feminist critical
analysis does not usually recognize disability as a category of otherness
(as it does with race, class, and gender) unless the study specifically states
this focus. Although helpful, she would like to see a shift away from women’s
autobiographical accounts of their own experiences with disability, which
often promote the “disaster/terror/pity scenario of disability,” to an articulation
of feminist Disability Studies as a “major critical subgenre within feminism.”
She asserts that feminist Disability Studies can be located in the broader
area of identity politics if discourses of the body marked as deviant are
included.
To illustrate her argument, Thomson draws on four feminist works.
The first three, Invalid Women: Figuring Feminine Illness in American
Fiction and Culture, 1840-1940 by Diane Price Herndl, Monstrous
Imagination by Marie-Helene Huet, and Tattoo, Torture, Mutilation,
and Adornment: The Denaturalization of the Body in Cultural Text
edited by Frances E. Mascia-Lees and Patricia Sharpe, do not deal with “disability”
specifically; instead, Thomson interprets these works in a feminist Disability
Studies perspective. She uses the fourth book, Barbara Hillyer’s Feminism
and Disability , because it specifically addresses the issue of disability
and feminism, and because it embodies the feminist principle that the personal
is political. Thomson hopes that these four books introduce perspective into
the emerging field of feminist Disability Studies.
Gleeson, B. (1999). Geographies of disability. New York:
Routledge.
Space, mobility, and accessibility are critically important issues for
people with disabilities, but this is given very little attention by social
policy makers, urban planners, architects, and social science researchers.
Brendan Gleeson steps into the breach with this book, which looks at how
geography shapes disabled people’s experiences and explores the relationship
between space and disability. Gleeson explicates how space, place, and mobility
are central to the lives of people with disabilities.
Drawing on a wide range of case studies and historical and contemporary
data sources, including maps and photographs, Gleeson, an Australian scholar,
presents the key theories and issues of the geography of disability. The book
is organized into three parts. The first part presents a critical appraisal
of theories of disability and space and develops a disability model based
on geography. The second part is a historical perspective and relies on case
studies to show the impact of the emergence of capitalism on the lives of
disabled people. The third part explores contemporary disability issues: the
Western city and the important policies of community care and accessibility
planning.
Goode, D. (1994). A world without words: The social construction
of children born deaf and blind [Health, Society, and Policy Series].
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Based on his study of two girls who were born with rubella and are deaf-blind
and mentally retarded, Goode argues that despite a use of formal language,
human beings can communicate and be understood through other means. He shows
how the children created their own set of symbols to construct their reality
using senses other than sight and sound.
Groce, N. (1985). Everyone here spoke sign language: Hereditary deafness
on Martha's Vineyard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
This ethno-historical study is an excellent portrayal of community life
for deaf and hearing individuals of Martha's Vineyard. The reader is presented
with the history of how the deafness was brought to the island. The book allows
the reader to view the typicality of the lives of Islanders who were deaf,
typicality due to the community's acceptance and ability to communicate with
them. Groce takes us beyond the confines of medical or social definitions
of deviancy and offers evidence that our pre-conceived stereotypes of what
a disability may mean are really determined by the social construct we create
as a society.
This well-researched book is a must, not only for people interested in
the field of disabilities, but for anyone trying to struggle with inclusion
into community life. The book is a simple thesis offering a profound message
in a wide array of disciplines. It will add thought to issues that will remain
unresolved and discussed for a long time to come.
Herndl, D. P. (1993). Invalid women: Figuring feminine illness in
American fiction and culture, 1840-1940. Chapel Hill, NC: University
of North Carolina Press.
Close textual readings of literary representations of disability and illness
in literary texts by such authors as Harriet Beecher Stowe, Charlotte Perkins
Gilman, Edith Wharton, Tillie Olsen, and others.
Hershey, L. (various dates). Poems and tapes: On the
lawn , In the way, Dreams of a different woman
(these are books of poetry); The prostitutes of Nairobi ,
You get proud by practicing (these are tapes of the author
reading her poems). Denver, CO: Author.
Hershey’s very powerful poems are about disability rights and lesbian sexuality.
Her work includes essays in a variety of periodicals as well as these books
and tapes. Well worth sending for, at $5 per book and $7 per tape. Some of
the poems can be read at http://www.cripcommentary.com/
.
Hillyer, B. (1993). Feminism and disability. Norman, OK:
University of Oklahoma Press.
Written out of a need in the feminist movement to include women with disabilities
and a need in the disability rights movement to address the unique experiences
of women, Feminism and Disability combines the personal, political,
and intellectual aspects of feminist theory and disability theory. Hillyer
discusses such issues as body awareness, community, nature and technology,
and the ways in which cultural standards of language, independence, and even
mother-blaming are constructed. She also challenges political movements
which stress productivity and normalization in order to include more types
of people and more aspects of the human condition.
Hubbard, R. (1997). Abortion and disability: Who should and should not
inhabit the world. In L. Davis (Ed.), The Disability Studies reader
(pp. 187-202). New York: Routledge.
Links reproductive technologies and genetic testing with the history of
eugenics.
Imrie, R. (1996). Disability and the city: International perspectives.
London: Paul Chapman Publishing Ltd.
Rob Imrie takes exception in this book to the common perception of people
with disabilities as helpless dependents who survive only on government benefits.
Imrie challenges the stereotypes of disability as “pitiful,” and as “less
than human,” and does so by exploring a critical context within which disabled
people experience marginalization and ostracism: the built environment and
physical access. In eight chapters dealing with the city, the physical environment,
state policy, design, planning, and access, Imrie considers the role of design
professionals--architects, planners, and building control officers–-in the
construction of specific spaces which bar people with disabilities and keep
them out. From broken streets and sidewalks to the absence of FM loop systems
in buildings, disabled people constantly and repeatedly negotiate hostile
environments. Drawing on a range of data and material from the United
Kingdom and the United States, Imrie shows how the environmental planning
system in Britain attempts to address the inaccessibility of the built environment,
and how people with disabilities contest the restrictions placed on their
mobility. Rob Imrie derives his insights from a wide range of social
science disciplines–-geography, sociology, and environmental planning–-to
craft a full picture of inaccessibility and struggle.
Ingstad, B., & Whyte, S. R. (Eds.). (1995). Disability and culture.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
This edited book takes a global look at disability. Each chapter reflects
understandings of disability from different cultures. Its anthropological
focus examines the relationship between disability and culture, explaining
disability in terms of social processes from a multicultural perspective.
Contributing authors, who have done research in places such as Borneo, Kenya,
Uganda, Nicaragua, as well as Europe and North America, explore the meanings
of different types of disabilities to different cultures, and seek to understand
the assumptions about humanity and personhood derived from their understandings
of disability.
Jahoda, S. (1995). Theatres of madness. In J. Terry & J. Urla (Eds.),
Deviant bodies: Critical perspectives on difference in science
and popular culture (pp. 251-276). Bloomington, IN: Indiana University
Press.
Photo-essay of 19th and 20th century representations of insanity and “female
disorders” juxtaposed with advertising images, letters, diaries, case histories,
and fictional texts.
Johnson, M. (2003). Make them go away: Clint Eastwood, Christopher
Reeve & the case against disability rights. Louisville, KY: The
Advocado Press.
This must-read book analyzes individual, state, and federal reactions to
the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA). Kicking it off with the
media examples of Clint Eastwood and Christopher Reeve, Mary Johnson, founder
and editor of The Disability Rag and Ragged Edge
magazines, ties together individual experiences, watershed cases, popular
culture, and media coverage to offer a cultural and historical analysis of
disability rights before and after the ADA. With an honest tone she confronts
an overwhelming prejudice against people with disabilities manifest by an
inexcusable inaccessibility to the world in which we all live. She describes
the current state of the ADA and challenges a society that welcomes people
with disabilities in theory but prevents them from living full lives in practice.
“A law cannot guarantee what a culture will not give.”
Keith, L. (Ed.). (1994). Mustn't grumble: Writings by disabled women.
London: The Women's Press.
This edited book, compiled by a woman with a disability, presents writings
by other women who have a range of physical disabilities. The short stories
and poems included in this book range in topic from issues of accessibility
to abuse to equality. Disability is framed by these narratives as a social,
cultural, and political issue, not only as a personal one. This is an excellent
account of disability issues from a woman's perspective. It is powerful, moving,
and educating for all readers.
Keith, L. (Ed.). (1996). What happened to you? Writings by disabled
women. New York: The New Press.
Lois Keith compiled collections of fiction, essays, and poetry by disabled
women in her new book, What Happened to You? Her goal
is to give women with disabilities a space to express their views on such
topics as abuse, equality, sexuality, prejudice, and legislation dealing with
disability issues. These narratives construct disability as a cultural and
political issue, not only as a personal one.
Keith, L. (2001). Take up thy bed and walk: Death, disability and
cure in classic fiction for girls. New York: Routledge.
Literary analysis and critique of disability and gender in 19th- and early
20th-century children’s literature.
Kleege, G. (1999). Sight unseen. New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press.
Critical and cultural analysis of both vision and blindness. Incorporates
a critical reading of stereotypical tropes of blindness in literature, film,
and everyday discourse.
Krieger, L. H. (Ed.). (2003). Backlash against the ADA: Reinterpreting
disability rights [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
This edited book examines the backlash or resistance to the Americans with
Disabilities Act (ADA) and disability rights generally by federal courts,
the media, and businesses. The 12 chapters of the book describe how courts
have ignored the spirit and watered down the provisions of disability rights
laws and how the media have misconstrued and ridiculed the ADA. The authors
argue that judges, media representatives, and others do not understand or
openly reject the minority group or civil rights model underlying disability
rights. Although some of the chapters analyze the legal reasoning and interpretations
of court cases in depth, the book is generally accessible to non-legal readers.
In addition to Linda Krieger, contributors include Ruth Colker, Lennard Davis,
Matthew Diller, Harlan Hahn, Vicki Laden, Wendy Parmet, Stephen Percy, Marta
Russell, Kay Schriner, Gregory Schwartz, Richard Scotch, Anita Silvers,
and Michael Stein.
Lane, H. (1992). The mask of benevolence: Disabling the Deaf community.
New York: Vintage Books.
The reviewer wonders if Lane would be put off that this book is annotated
in an information packet on Disability Studies. Throughout the book, Lane
asserts that deafness is not a disability, rather it is a linguistic minority,
and that the hearing (audist) establishment has a long history of oppressing
members of this linguistic minority through enforced school mainstreaming,
which Lane terms the “most restrictive environment.” While Lane does not dispute
that other students (he discusses students with cognitive impairments and
behavioral issues) might require special education services, he refutes the
idea that deaf students require oral special education.
Much of what Lane presents can be generalized to many other minority groups,
including people who are labeled with disabilities (e.g., obstacles that the
deaf community faces are enforced by the hearing community, his discussion
of colonialism and paternalism, and the role of the oppressed). Much of Lane’s
focus is the hegemony of audist institutions that oppress the Deaf cultural
minority. Lane attempts to unmask, critique, and fight the institutions that
serve to oppress and disable deaf people.
While Lane does not critique the ADA itself, he comments upon the necessity
of deaf people to participate in lobbying for its passing, but he reminds
the reader that those energies instead might have been spent in lobbying for
the application of the Bilingual Education Act to teaching students in American
Sign Language (ASL). In particular, Lane critiques two main institutions—the
education and medical establishments. The education establishment teaches
deaf students from a hearing perspective, and Lane emphasizes the need for
reform in the education of deaf students, for a return to how deaf education
operated in the 19th century—residential schools, deaf teachers, teaching
from a Deaf cultural perspective, ASL as the mode of instruction. Lane offers
the Gallaudet Revolution of 1988 (Deaf President Now) as a philosophical
model for deaf people taking back deaf education. Lane acknowledges the controversy
surrounding residential schools, so he offers a detailed plan to reform the
education of deaf students in the mainstream, comparing it to bilingual education.
Lane also discusses the medical establishment’s attempt to eliminate Deaf
culture by enforcing oralism onto deaf children through cochlear implants.
He discusses in depth the history, the process, and the outcomes of implanting
cochlear devices. In providing the history of the FDA approval of cochlear
implants, he discusses the failure of the FDA to consult deaf leaders and
scholars, thus reinforcing his argument that the Deaf cultural minority is
devalued and oppressed in the majority audist society.
Linneman, D. R. (2001). Idiots: Stories about mindedness and mental
retardation. New York: Peter Lang.
Personal and powerful, this collection of field notes, letters, interviews,
and insight challenges us all to rethink prevailing notions of intelligence.
At the forefront of this book is the concept of mental retardation. Sharing
his experiences and stories with four children, Linneman confronts this socially
constructed concept, pointing out the limitations it imposes on children’s
lives and on adults’ perception of children’s potential. While the feel of
this book is anecdotal, it deals well with the questionable perpetuation of
oppressive assumptions of incompetence and ideas of normalcy. Linneman deconstructs
the concept of mental retardation and suggests focusing on the concept of
mindedness rather than embracing unhelpful labels.
Linton, S. (1998). Claiming disability: Knowledge and identity
[Cultural Front]. New York: New York University Press.
In this book, Simi Linton studies disability in relation to identity. She
argues that Disability Studies must understand the meanings people make of
variations in human behavior, appearance, and functioning, not simply acknowledge
that these variations “exist.” Linton explores the divisions society constructs
between those labeled disabled and those who are not. She avoids a medicalized
discussion of disability and promotes the notion that people with disabilities
need to claim their identities as disabled and as contributing members to
the understanding of disability as a socio-political experience.
Linton, S. (1998). Disability Studies/Not Disability Studies. Disability
& Society, 13(4), 525-540.
In this article, Simi Linton seeks to define the boundaries between what
should be considered Disability Studies and what should not. For reasons that
she outlines, she proposes that curriculum and research that emphasize intervention
should be viewed as separate from Disability Studies, which is a socio-political-cultural
examination of disability. Linton advocates a liberal arts-based model similar
to that which frames women's studies and African-American studies.
Lloyd, M. (1992). Does she boil eggs? Towards a feminist model of
disability. Disability, Handicap & Society, 7 (3),
207-221.
The author examines disability from the perspective of women with disabilities.
She focuses on the social model of disability rather than a medical model
and asserts that disability is another form of oppression experienced by women.
She argues that disabled women have been excluded from both the women's movement,
which is oriented toward non-disabled women, and from the disability rights
movement, which is oriented toward disabled men. Using the history of black
feminism, the author argues for a reframing of the analysis in which to explore
the simultaneous experiences of gender and disability.
Longmore, P. K. (2003). Why I burned my book and other essays on
disability [American Subjects]. Philadelphia: Temple University
Press.
This book is composed of a series of essays on disability scholarship and
advocacy by historian Paul Longmore. The book contains an introduction and
four parts. Part One, Analyses and Reconstructions, includes essays
on disability history, including the League of the Physically Handicapped
and the Great Depression and Activism in the 1970s and Beyond. Part Two addresses
portrayals of disability in television and films. Part Three focuses on ethics
and advocacy, and specifically medical decision making and physician assisted
suicide. Part Four, Protests and Forecasts , includes essays on disability
culture and bioethicist Peter Singer as well as an autobiographical account
of experiences that lad to the title of the book.
Why I Burned My Book relates to the author’s public protest
of discriminatory and unfair Social Security Administration policies that
discourage disabled people from working. The book is extremely well-written
and is must reading for anyone interested in Disability Studies.
Longmore, P. K., & Umansky, L. (Eds.). (2001). The new disability
history: American perspectives [The History of Disability Series].
New York: New York University Press.
Co-edited by Paul K. Longmore (Professor of History and Director of the
Institute on Disability at San Francisco State University) and Lauri Umansky
(Associate Professor of History at Suffolk University and the author of Motherhood
Reconceived), this volume, containing a collection of fourteen essays, contributes
to the academic debate on the history of disability in the United States.
The volume explores the complex meanings of disability as identity and cultural
signifier in American history. Rejecting the historical examination of disability
based on medical pathology, the contributors to this collection offer a new
approach that examines social, cultural, and political factors.
The introductory chapter by the editors emphasizes that “…like people of
color, people with disabilities have complex and often hidden histories; these
need to be found and explained. Like gender, like race, disability must become
a standard analytical tool in the historian's tool chest.” They advocate
for the need “to join the social-constructionist insights and interdisciplinary
of cultural studies with solid empirical research as we analyze disability's
past.”
The fourteen essays here are arranged both chronologically and thematically.
The timeline runs from the early 19th century to the present, with a majority
of the pieces situated in the late 19th to early 20th centuries. These essays
have been divided in three parts and the thematic groupings have been titled
as (1) "Uses and Contests," (2) "Redefinitions and Resistance," and (3) "Images
and Identities.” As explained by the editors, while these overarching themes
appear in each of the historical periods in question, they seem to emerge
with particular force in the 19th century, at the turn of the century, and
in the mid-to-late 20th century, respectively.
Lonsdale, S. (1990). Women and disability. New York: St.
Martin's Press.
Lonsdale explores how women with physical disabilities experience the double
discrimination of being both a woman and a person with a disability in society.
Placing physical disability in a social and political context rather than
an individual one, she uncovers how women with disabilities have been rendered
invisible, how they see their self image and body image, how physical disability
often leads to dependence, and how women experience a loss of civil liberties
and how they face discrimination. Lonsdale also considers the ways in which
these situations can change for women; specifically, how policy practices
can change so women can achieve greater independence. Chapters include subjects
such as the social context of disability, invisible women, self-image and
sexuality, employment, financial consequences of disability, discrimination,
and independence.
Luczak, R. (1997). Ten reasons why Michael and Geoff never got it on. In
K. Fries (Ed.), Staring back: The disability experience from the inside
out (pp. 264-277). New York: Plume.
An ironic and sad short story about a deaf man and a hearing man who, though
very attracted to each other, do not become lovers. Also in Staring
Back: Gay/lesbian poets Kenny Fries, Adrienne Rich, Tim Dlugos,
and Elizabeth Clare.
Makas, E., & Schlesinger, L. (Eds). (1996). End results and starting
points: Expanding the field of Disability Studies. Richardson, TX:
Society for Disability Studies.
This edited book is comprised of chapters from extended abstracts of some
of the presentations given at the Society for Disability Studies in Rockville,
Maryland in 1994. The authors discuss numerous topics relating to Disability
Studies, although the focus is almost exclusively physical disabilities. The
book is divided into sections, including: Disabling and Nondisabling Images
of Disability, Family Reactions to Disability , Cultural Differences
in Response to Disability , Acknowledging Challenges to Self Determination
, A Progress Report on the ADA , Increasing Access to Services
, Designing Relevant Research , Expanding Approaches to Disability
, Contact and Communication as Vehicles for Change, Self Definition
and Self Support, and The Power of Community as an Agent of Social
Change.
Matson, F. (1990). Walking alone and marching together: A history
of the organized blind movement in the United States, 1940-1990 (1st
ed.). Baltimore: National Federation of the Blind. Also available in public
domain on the website of the National Federation of the Blind at:
http://www.nfb.org/books/books1/wamtc.htm
Written by Professor Floyd Matson who happens to be a former student and
colleague of Professor Jacobus Ten Broek (founder of the National Federation
of the Blind [NFB] in 1940), this huge volume is a nice compilation and synthesization
of various important speeches by the leaders of NFB and other relevant documents
dealing with various core issues in the field of blindness from 1940 to 1990.
The book captures the history of the NFB, the largest national advocacy organization
of the blind in United States. As the author himself summarizes, “this book
is the story of those fifty years of Federationism in America: the history
of a unique social revolution, democratic and nonviolent but not always
peaceful; the drama of an irresistible force, what some call blind force,
colliding again and again with the seemingly immovable objects of supervision
and superstition; and the narrative of a minority group once powerless, scattered,
and impoverished coming together as a people and forging an independent movement,
gaining self-expression and learning self-direction, proclaiming normality
and demanding equality.”
Meekosha, H. (1998). Body battles: Bodies, gender, and disability.
In T. Shakespeare (Ed.), Disability studies reader: Social science perspectives
(pp. 163-180). London & New York, NY: Cassell.
Calls for the need for a feminist theory of embodiment complicated by insights
gained from Disability Studies.
Minow, M. (1990). Making all the difference: Inclusion, exclusion,
and American law. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Martha Minow, a renowned Harvard Law School professor, takes a close look
at the way our legal system operates in dealing with people on the basis of
race, gender, age, ethnicity, religion, and disability. Minow confronts a
number of dilemmas of difference resulting from contradictory legal strategies--strategies
that either acknowledge or ignore difference when attempting to correct inequality.
She explores the historical sources of ideas about difference and offers new
ways of thinking about difference. Minow’s book is a brief for a new jurisprudence
that recognizes and respects people’s difference.
Minow is interested in how people’s differences are shaped and misshaped
by the way the law treats difference. Literary and feminist theory, as well
as anthropological and social history, informs Minow’s work; she identifies
the unstated assumptions about difference that tend to perpetuate discrimination
through the very reforms that attempt to eliminate it. Education for
children with disabilities, bilingual education, and Native American land
claims are among some of the problems Minow discusses from a fresh perspective.
Mirzoeff, N. (1995). Framed: The deaf in the harem. In J. Terry &
J. Urla (Eds.), Deviant bodies: Critical perspectives on difference
in science and popular culture (pp. 49-77). Bloomington, IN: Indiana
University Press.
Historical account of how deafness and difference served to shore up Western
ideas about normalcy.
Mitchell, D. T., & Snyder, S. L. (Eds.). (1997). The body and
physical difference: Discourses of disability [The Body, In Theory:
Histories of Cultural Materialism]. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
This collection of fifteen essays explores the subject of human disability
by focusing on the representations of disability in literature and art throughout
history. It aims to introduce Disability Studies to the humanities and to
challenge conceptions of physical and cognitive difference that strengthen
definitions of “normal” based on stigmatization of the “other.” In outing
discourses of disability that perpetuate the dominant ideology of ableism,
the contributors call for new conceptions of the disabled body in the arts
and the rightful place of Disability Studies within the humanities. This compelling
volume is split into two sections that break down the political economy of
representations of disability: Part 1, Representations in History
and Part 2, A History of Representations . Authors include Martha Edwards,
Martin S. Pernick, Paul K. Longmore, Felicity A. Nussbaum, Jan Gordon, and
Rosemarie Garland Thomson.
Morris, J. (1993). Feminism and disability. Feminist Review, 43
, 57-70.
The author discusses the absence of women with disabilities from feminist
scholarship and feminist theory. Morris claims that a significant failure
of feminism is that it fails to incorporate disabled women into its politics,
theory, research, and methodology. She argues that feminist theory would benefit
from the inclusion of the concerns and experiences of disabled women, and
that feminist theory and feminist methodology have major contributions to
make to disability research. The author discusses her anger and frustration
with feminism in two ways: first, that disability is generally invisible from
feminism's mainstream agenda, and second, that when disability is a subject
of research by feminists, the researchers objectify disabled people so that
the research is alienated from their experiences rather than attempting to
understand the experiences of disabled women.
Morris, J. (1992). Personal and political: A feminist perspective on researching
physical disability. Disability, Handicap & Society, 7 (2),
157-166.
Morris asserts that feminist theory and methodology have largely ignored
and alienated women with disabilities and the research conducted by disabled
people. She argues that feminist theory needs to take up the challenge of
applying its principles to the study of disability and to examine the lives
of disabled women. In turn, Morris feels that disabled women and disability
research in general has much to learn from feminist methodology; mainly the
principle of making the personal political. In addition, Morris outlines the
role she sees for nondisabled researchers interested in researching disability-related
issues. She views the role of the nondisabled researcher as an ally, and
calls on nondisabled as well as disabled researchers to continue to study
the ways in which the nondisabled society oppresses its members with disabilities.
Lastly, she argues that disability research is of great importance in the
general understanding of the perpetuation of inequalities in society.
Morris, J. (1998). Pride against prejudice: Transforming attitudes
to disabilities (Reprint ed.). North Pomfret, VT: Trafalgar Square.
Morris, a disabled feminist and activist, provides a feminist analysis
to the study of the experiences of women with disabilities. Basing her arguments
on the feminist principle that the personal is political, Morris eloquently
challenges such issues as prejudice, abortion, and the notion that people
with disabilities lead lives that are not worth living. She further discusses
the history of people with disabilities in institutions and under the Nazi
regime. Morris also examines the meaning of disability in Western culture
and the meanings of history of segregation, dependence, and an emerging independence
of people with disabilities. Pride Against Prejudice is a commentary on political
activism and rights, and stresses the need to fight back against the prejudice,
stereotypes, and oppression of an ableist culture.
Nagler, M. (Ed.). (1993). Perspectives on disability (2nd
ed.). Palo Alto, CA: Health Markets Research.
In this second edition edited by Mark Nagler, he once again explores the
meaning of disability in our society. Using an interdisciplinary perspective,
he offers articles by sociologists, psychologists, therapists, and others
to explore the ways in which disability is constructed and understood. The
book includes a foreword by Evan Kemp Jr. and an introduction by Nagler. He
divides the book into the following sections: “What It Means To Be Disabled,”
“Society and Disability,” “The Family and Disability,” “Sexuality and Disability,”
“Medical and Psychological Issues and Disability,” “Education, Employment,
Social Planning and Disability,” and “Legal And Ethical Issues and
Disability.” The selections for this second edition are good, but there
are not many articles relating to people with developmental disabilities.
This is the one main weakness of this text.
Nielsen, K. (2001). Helen Keller and the politics of civic fitness.
In P. K. Longmore & L. Umansky (Eds.), The new disability history:
American perspectives (pp. 268-290). New York: New York University
Press.
Explores why, despite her affiliation with a range of radical social and
political identities, Helen Keller failed to bring such politicized understandings
to the topic of disability or blindness.
O'Brien, R. (2001). Crippled justice: The history of modern disability
policy in the workplace. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Inspired by the lack of change and negative reaction after the passage
of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), O’Brien traces the
history of people with disabilities in the workplace from World War II to
the present. From normalization and vocational rehabilitation to a lack of
support for rights-oriented disability policy, she identifies the roots of
a perpetuated inequality at the workplace in society’s attitudes toward disability.
This book outs societal resistance to disability rights by examining the
social and political implications of the historical debate for civil rights
and its continuation today. Central to this current debate is the state of
the ADA, and O’Brien clearly describes the dangers of where we are so that
we can work to overcome these barriers in future successes.
O’Connor, E. (2000). Raw material: Producing pathology in Victorian
culture. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Focuses on the cultural production pathology in Victorian culture.
Includes chapters on Victorian beliefs about the causes of breast cancer,
as well as chapters on masculinities and prosthetic technologies.
Oliver, M. (1990). The politics of disablement. London:
The MacMillan Press.
Michael Oliver, a renowned British disability rights theoretician, gives
voice in this book to the challenge disabled people have hurled at the dominant
ideology that devalues and demeans disability as a medical condition. Oliver
argues that disability is a social problem, and that society needs to change
how it conceptualizes and deals with disability. He takes a look at the individualized
and medicalized views of disability and describes how they have been produced
in a capitalist society. Oliver also analyzes the possibilities of achieving
political change in the capitalism of the late 20th century and how the emerging
disability rights movement has a role in effectuating change.
Oliver, M. (1996). Understanding disability: From theory to practice.
New York: Palgrave.
Michael Oliver, the preeminent British disability rights theoretician,
engages in a wide-ranging collection of essays with recent and perennial
problems involving disability, citizenship and community care, social policy
and welfare, education, rehabilitation, and the politics of new social movements.
Reflecting on his own life as a disabled person and theorizing about the
broader social, economic, and political aspects of disability, Oliver attempts
to deepen and broaden our understanding of disability.
The book consists of eleven essays and represents Oliver’s vision of moving
from theory to practice in various contexts such as welfare, education, rehabilitation,
and politics. Oliver seeks to apply a materialist analysis to disability issues,
rooting his theoretical insights in the current realities of society that
impact on disabled people.
Pelka, F. (1997). The ABC-CLIO companion to the disability rights
movement. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, Inc.
This text is a general introduction to the disability rights movement and
the people and court cases that support or challenge it. It includes entries
on such people as Ed Roberts and Judy Heumann. The book is organized as a
dictionary, and has references from every aspect of the disability rights
movement, from court cases to famous people, to historical events and disability
culture. It also includes a chronology, beginning with the founding of the
American School for the Deaf in 1817 and concluding in 1996.
Pernick, M. S. (1996). The black stork: Eugenics and the death of
"defective" babies in American medicine and motion pictures since 1915.
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, Inc.
Based on extensive research, this text uses the story of a Chicago surgeon
who allowed the death of the infants he diagnosed as so-called "defectives"
in the 1910s. The case was well publicized through the print and film media.
The author goes into depth to analyze the broader questions on how eugenics
became linked with euthanasia and social prejudice, how medicine influences
modern culture, and how mass culture redefined key medical concepts. As the
author summarizes in the first chapter, the book explains: “’Mass culture,'
which includes any production made for a mass audience whether or not it was
demonstrably ‘popular’ in origin, constituted a crucial battleground on which
professionals, popularizers, journalists, censors, and audiences struggled
to shape the meanings of ‘eugenics’ and ‘euthanasia’ and to define the connection
between them.” This text is a great source to understand the eugenics movement
and the role of film media in the pre-Nazi era since the 1910s, particularly
for those in biomedical ethics, medical care, disability rights activists,
and film enthusiasts.
Reinders, H. (2000). The future of the disabled in liberal society:
An ethical analysis. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
Hans Reinders, Professor of Ethics and Mental Disability at the Vrije Universiteit
in Amsterdam, shows the meaning of life and the place of the disabled person
cannot adequately be understood within liberal society. As Reinders argues
in his book, liberal society gives us two conflicting messages: on the one
hand, it encourages prenatal diagnosis and selective abortion, but on the
other hand it breaks down barriers so as to help improve the lives of people
with disabilities. This is a philosophical treatise in three parts in which
Reinders shifts the discussion from the medical paradigm of disability to
the paradigm of normalization where potential for life and love is emphasized
and valued. Given the Human Genome Project that seeks to uncover the billions
of genes that regulate human life and that seeks to give humankind the power
to correct physical and mental “anomalies,” Reinders raises very interesting
philosophical questions about liberalism, morality, genetics, reproduction,
dependency and responsibility for others.
Rothman, D. J., & Rothman, S. M. (1984). The Willowbrook wars:
A decade of struggle for social justice. New York: Harper & Row,
Publishers.
Documents events that occurred after court-ordered reforms of Willowbrook,
an institution for people labeled mentally retarded. Rothman and Rothman followed
events at Willowbrook from 1975 to 1982 in an attempt to understand social
reform and its implications for people being deinstitutionalized.
Russell, M. (1998). Beyond ramps: Disability at the end of the social
contract. Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press.
Written in the immediate post-ADA era in the second half of the 1990s,
through a radical perspective based on the political economy approach, this
book vividly exposes the evils of a capitalistic and charity model and its
impact on the marginalized people such as the poor, the elderly, and particularly
people who are disabled. The author questions the rhetoric of civil rights
as enshrined under ADA in the absence of concrete affirmative action to bring
about a significant change in the lives of disabled people in United States.
She makes reference to the models of social policies in a country like Sweden
to cite an example of greater social justice in regard to the treatment of
the disabled.
Schlesinger, L., & Taub, D. E. (Eds.). (2003). Instructional
materials for sociology and Disability Studies. Washington, DC: ASA
Teaching Resources Center.
This packet includes a broad array of information related to teaching sociology
and Disability Studies. The information is organized into the following sections:
Editors’ Introduction; Introductory Articles; Disability Studies:
Interdisciplinary and International Perspectives , including articles
on Disability Studies, syllabi for Disability Studies courses, syllabi for
other interdisciplinary courses, and syllabi for courses taught outside the
United States; Sociology of Disability Courses , including syllabi
for sociology of disability courses and syllabi for courses on social psychology
and disability; Sociology and Disability Courses, including a syllabus
for a course on the sociology of Deafness and Deaf people, syllabi for courses
on health and disability, syllabi for courses on gender and disability, syllabi
for courses on social policy and disability, and syllabi for courses on representations
of disability in literature and the arts; Disability Studies in General
Sociology Courses , including articles on the inclusion of disability
and syllabi for general sociology courses; Exercises and Assignments
, including book reviews, exercises, assignments that focus on writing,
media, film, and videos, and other projects; Additional Resources
, including articles, recent publications and bibliographies, journals and
magazines, and films, music and art.
Scotch, R. K. (2001). From good will to civil rights: Transforming
federal disability policy (2nd ed.) [Health, Society, and Policy Series].
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
First published in 1984, this book was a landmark contribution to Disability
Studies at a time when the disability rights movement was gaining momentum
in the United States. In its first edition (1984), the author traced the changes
in federal disability policy, focusing on the development and implementation
of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. The second edition (published
in 2001) includes an added epilogue which briefly touches upon the effects
and disappointments associated with the Americans with Disabilities Act, passed
in 1990, in the context of the continuing movement to secure full civil rights
for people with disabilities in the 1990s.
Shakespeare, T. (Ed.). (1998). The disability reader: Social science
perspectives. London and New York: Cassell.
This reader offers to the student or researcher new to the field a broad
introduction to Disability Studies from a social science perspective. The
volume focuses on Disability Studies as it has evolved in Britain. In the
“Introduction,” the editor describes the book as promoting a dialogue between
new disability researchers, the political disability community, and traditional
academic approaches. The book is composed of three parts. Part One contains
two articles that provide a background to the origins and development of Disability
Studies. Part Two attempts to cover the range of approaches within contemporary
Disability Studies, including sociology, education, geography, and cultural
studies. The final part, which contains five chapters, discusses various
controversies and directions for the field. The editor does not claim
this collection to be either comprehensive or exhaustive, but rather to offer
an “introduction to the types of intellectual and political engagements which
are taking place…”
Shakespeare, T., Gillespie-Sells, K., & Davies, D. (1996). The
sexual politics of disability: Untold desires. London: Cassell Publications.
One of the authors of this British book is Kathy Gillespie-Sells, a lesbian
with a disability. She also runs Regard, an organization and campaigning group
for lesbians and gay men with disabilities. Regard’s email address is
regard@dircon.co.uk
. Chapter 6, “Double the Trouble?”, is about being gay or lesbian
and disabled. Lesbian, gay, and bisexual accounts occur elsewhere in the book,
but this chapter deals exclusively with their issues, including community
access, prejudice against disability, choosing a living situation, and practical
issues such as how one can meet people when he or she is accompanied by personal
assistants.
Shapiro, J. P. (1993). No pity: People with disabilities forging
a new civil rights movement. New York: Times Books.
This well-written book presenting a nice account of the disability rights
movement was published soon after the passing of the ADA. The author is a
well-known journalist who was covering social issues for the U.S. News
& World Report at the time of the writing of this book. It is
a product of the author’s research of five years which involved over 2,000
interviews with hundreds of disabled people. Written in People First language
and based on the “minority model” approach, the book vividly and succinctly
covers the disability rights movement primarily since the late 1960s onward
leading to the passing of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, the Education for
All Handicapped Children Act (1975) and culminating in the passing of the
ADA.
Shildrick, M., & Price, J. (1999). Breaking the boundaries of the broken
body. In J. Price & M. Shildrick (Eds.), Feminist theory and the
body: A reader (pp. 432-444). London and New York: Routledge.
Argues for a radical politics of disability that conceives disability as
a transgressive category that “demands that we rethink not simply the boundaries
of the body, but equally those between sameness and difference, and indeed
self and other” (p. 442).
Smith, J. D. (1985). Minds made feeble: The myth and legacy of the
Kallikaks. Austin, TX: PRO-ED.
Debunking Goddard's infamous Kallikak study that purported to show the
hereditary transmission of "feeblemindedness," Smith traces members of the
Kallikak family and demonstrates how facts were twisted by the eugenicists
to prove their theories.
Snyder, S. L., Brueggemann, B. J., & Garland-Thomson, R. (Eds.). (2002).
Disability Studies: Enabling the humanities. New York:
The Modern Language Association of America.
This collection of 25 essays builds on earlier volumes and claims an overdue
space for Disability Studies within the humanities. Stressing that disability
remains an unspoken topic or stigmatized subject, this collection defines
the “universalization of disability across the humanities” and both the need
and benefits of studying disability as a subject of critical inquiry and category
of critical analysis. It demonstrates how to integrate ideas and representations
of disability into all teaching and scholarship, as well as people with disabilities
into academia. The essays then become models of disability finally being
recognized as an important aspect of diversity and tied to larger social
justice values, worthy of the highest scholarship in literary and language
studies.
Stiker, H. (1999). A history of disability (W. Sayers, Trans.)
[Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press. (Original work published 1987).
Stiker offers a framework for analyzing disability across the ages in this
thorough and passionate work. Focusing on cultural reactions to disability
from ancient times to the present, he examines the societal assumption that
sameness and conformity are ideal, thus preventing the celebration of diversity.
He reflects on how attitudes toward disability reveal the true nature of societies
and offers plenty of examples suggesting that difference is still demonized,
disability stigmatized. He proposes a “discourse of difference” that would
allow society to finally achieve its potential and humanity by embracing
all members. The book takes on a conversational style but is thorough. It
includes a foreword by David T. Mitchell and the chapters The Bible and
Disability: The Cult of God; Western Antiquity: The Fear of the Gods
; The System of Charity ; The Classical Centuries: The Chill
; and The Birth of Rehabilitation .
Taylor, S. J., & Bogdan, R. (1989). On accepting relationships between
people with mental retardation and nondisabled people: Towards an understanding
of acceptance. Disability, Handicap & Society, 4(1), 21-36.
The authors discuss a "sociology of acceptance" as a theoretical model
for understanding relationships between people without disabilities and people
with mental retardation. They state that family, religious commitment, humanitarian
sentiments, and feelings of friendship are all sentiments expressed by nondisabled
people who have relationships with people with mental retardation.
Thompson, K., & Andrezejewski, J. (1989). Why can’t Sharon Kowalski
come home? Denver, CO: Spinsters Ink.
This book by Karen Thompson, a woman whose lover Sharon Kowalski was injured
in a car accident, tells the story of her fight to have authority over Sharon’s
care and living situation after her brain injury. Kowalski’s parents, to whom
she had not yet come out, refused to acknowledge their relationship and took
steps to prevent Thompson from visiting or having any say in their daughter’s
care. Their low expectations of their disabled daughter and of the rehabilitation
system, combined with their disbelief and homophobia, resulted in their daughter
being warehoused without the opportunity to see many of the people she loved.
The book was published before Thompson successfully obtained guardianship.
A powerful and descriptive narrative.
Thomson, R. G. (1997). Extraordinary bodies: Figuring physical disability
in American culture and literature. New York: Columbia University
Press.
This is a key work in the field of literary criticism and Disability Studies.
It examines literary and cultural representations of physical disability,
framing disability within a cultural and minority context rather than a medical
one. The book contains three parts. Part I, Politicizing Bodily Differences
, provides an introduction as well as a theoretical framework. Part
II, Constructing Disabled Figures: Cultural and Literary Sites, examines
American freak shows, as well as representations of disability in literature,
including Harriet Beecher Stowe, Toni Morrison, and Audre Lorde. In a brief
conclusion, the author summarizes her intent in this writing “to critique
the politics of appearance that governs our interpretations of physical difference,
to suggest that disability requires accommodation rather than compensation,
and to shift our conception of disability from pathology to identity.”
Thomson, R. G. (2001). Seeing the disabled: Visual rhetorics of disability
in popular photography. In P. K. Longmore & L. Umansky (Eds.),
The new disability history: American perspectives (pp. 335-374).
New York: New York University Press.
Illustrates taxonomy of four visual rhetorics employed in the visual representation
of disability in popular photography.
Tremain, S. (Ed.). (1996). Pushing the limits: Disabled dykes produce
culture. London: Women’s Press.
This anthology begins with “Introduction: We’re here. We’re disabled and
queer. Get used to it,” by Shelley Tremain, and is divided into seven sections:
searching; becoming; loving; positioning; enduring; not surrendering; and
testifying, with five to twelve pieces by disabled dykes in each section.
This sensitive, intelligent, and questioning collection addresses topics such
as the power and importance of language, the misuses of power, the corruption
and convenience that governs the medical profession, and the passive disinterest
of non-disabled sisters. The selections include essays, poetry, stories,
and personal narratives.
Trent, J. W. (1994). Inventing the feeble mind: A history of mental
retardation in the United States [Medicine in Society]. Berkeley:
University of California Press.
James W. Trent, Jr. is an Associate Professor of Sociology and Social Work
at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville and also happens to be the
1995 winner of the Hervey B. Wilbur Award of the American Association on Mental
Retardation. In this well documented study, Trent uses public documents, private
letters, investigative reports, and rare photographs to present an interesting
historical analysis of mental retardation and the evolution of the institutional
system for people labeled mentally retarded in industrialized American society.
The book goes into depth about the process of institutional treatment of
people labeled intellectually disabled in the United States over the past
150 years and vividly traces the practices leading to an institutional system.
It is a great contribution to the social history of the United States and
an excellent source for students, researchers, human-services professionals,
as well as historians engaged in the area of intellectual disabilities.
Vernon, A. (1998). Multiple oppression and the disabled people’s movement.
In T. Shakespeare (Ed.), The disability reader: Social science perspectives
(pp. 201-210). London & New York: Cassell.
Advocates for an analysis of simultaneous oppressions of race, gender,
sexuality, age, and class in Disability Studies scholarship and activism.
Wendell, S. (1999). Feminism, disability, and transcendence of the
body. In J. Price & M. Shildrick (Eds.), Feminist theory and
the body: A reader (pp. 324-334). London and New York: Routledge.
Critiques contemporary feminist theorizing around the body as uninformed
by the lived experience of women with disabilities and argues for a rethinking
of the possibilities for strategic transcendence of the body in ways that
do not necessarily lead to alienation.
Wendell, S. (1997). Toward a feminist theory of disability. In L. J. Davis
(Ed.), The Disability Studies reader (pp. 260-278). New York:
Routledge.
The author argues that disability is not a “biological given,” rather it
is a social construction of biological reality (like gender) and because of
this, the fact that 16% of women have disabilities, and that feminist thinkers
have raised the most radical issues concerning cultural attitudes to the
body, a feminist theory of disability is needed. Wendell argues that those
with disabilities are constructed as “the other” and because of this are
seen as failing to control their bodies (control of our bodies is demanded
by society) and as symbolizing the threat of pain, limitation, dependency,
and death. She calls for people with disabilities and their knowledge and
experience with their bodies to be fully integrated into society, and concludes
that in this way bodies would be liberated.
Wendell, S. (1996). The rejected body: Feminist philosophical reflections
on disability. London and New York: Routledge.
In The Rejected Body, Susan Wendell, a woman with Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome, draws parallels between her own experiences with illness
to feminist theory and Disability Studies. She argues (as many others have),
that feminist theory has neglected to incorporate the perspectives and experiences
of women with disabilities, and that these perspectives must be included in
future discussions of feminist ethics, the body, and the social critique of
the medical model. Wendell also examines how cultural attitudes about the
body contribute to disability oppression and society's unwillingness to accept
different types of bodies.
Wolfensberger, W. (1975). The origin and nature of our institutional
models (Rev. ed.). Syracuse, NY: Human Policy Press.
This is an analysis of the development of and growth in institutions in
the 19th and 20th centuries. The book examines institutionalization in terms
of the ideas and philosophies of leaders in the field of mental retardation.
This book contains the foundations for Wolfensberger's influential writings
about "normalization."
Autobiographies/Personal Narratives
This section highlights autobiographies and personal narratives of people
with disabilities.
Barron, J., & Barron, S. (1992). There’s a boy in here.
New York: Simon & Schuster.
There’s A Boy In Here tells two stories: that of the mother
of a child with autism, and that of the child. The book is mainly told from
the mother’s point of view, recounting her gradual recognition that something
was “wrong” with her baby. Judy Barron describes in great detail her son Sean’s
difficult behaviors, his tantrums, his compulsions and fixation, and his
seeming indifference to his family, and her own tumultuous efforts to simultaneously
understand his behaviors and help him diminish them. Sean then retells some
of these parent accounts with his own memories of these events; in particular,
he emphasizes how these fixations and behaviors were not only pleasurable
for him, but were also an attempt to regulate and control his environment
and lessen the possibilities of failure for him. Judy chronicles the family’s
treatment at the hands of psychology and medical professionals—Judy is repeatedly
addressed as “Mother,” not by her own name, and Sean’s autism is blamed on
her—and Sean writes of his fear and distrust of these professionals. Except
for nine months he spent in a residential school, Sean was fully included
in general education throughout his schooling, and Sean provides a detailed
perspective of his classroom experiences. The cover of the book states that
it tells “the story of his emergence from autism” and the narrative hinges
upon Sean’s realization that he must gain control of his compulsions, his
fears, and his behaviors in order to “breakthrough” and “overcome autism.”
While the account provides the perspectives of both the parent and the autistic
person, the narrative ultimately reinforces the idea that autism is something
to be cured, to be overcome, to be vanquished.
Blackman, L. (1999). Lucy’s story: Autism and other adventures.
Mt. Ommaney, Australia: Book in Hand.
In her autobiography, Lucy Blackman gives a very detailed insider’s view
of autism before and after she learned to communicate through typing.
Blackman adeptly discusses the social construction of speech and how her lack
of a method of communication allowed the process of the experience of receiving
and speaking to pass her by in her early years. In her later years,
she developed a friendship with an Australian writer who became her mentor
in her burgeoning desire to be a writer. This book, as well as being
a fascinating autobiographical narrative, is essential reading on the aspects
of sensory discrimination, issues of visual perception, and discussion of
the rituals associated with autism. Blackman also provides an in depth
discussion of her school placements, what worked, what did not work in her
school settings, and how her family relationships bridged both her school
and communication gaps. A majority of the book provides a comprehensive
discussion of the method of facilitated communication (FC). Blackman
goes into meticulous detail as to how she came to learn FC and she takes text
from when she first acquired the method and analyzes it to show the process
of communication. In this discussion she provides her own explanation
for message passing errors (language keys, personal communication perceptions,
vision issues), and discusses how she used the method in high school—what
types of classroom situations and student-teacher/home communication methods
were successful and not. Blackman also gives the reader an honest and
sometimes humorous account of her relationship with her mother and sisters.
Bérubé, M. (1996). Life as we know it: A father,
family, and an exceptional child. New York: Vintage Books.
This remarkable book is a father's story of the life of his 4-year-old
son James, who has Down syndrome. It is far more than just a personal memoir
of his son's birth and young life. In following the developmental stages,
social experiences, and involvement with social services that James passes
through, Bérubé explores their social implications, including
such topics as IQ testing, the politics of education, disability law, social
services, health care, and entitlements. Implicit in these discussions are
not just his own family's experiences in these realms, but also concepts such
as social justice, what it means to be human, and what kind of society is
valued and by what means we determine this value.
Callahan, J. (1989). Don’t worry, he won’t get far on foot.
New York: Vintage Books.
Equal parts laugh-out-loud funny and angering to the point of disbelief,
this is John Callahan’s story told in his own words and pictures. John is
a cartoonist whose work not only challenges but attacks and explodes social
norms. He is also a quadriplegic and recovering alcoholic who has suffered
through abusive support providers, endured battles with the welfare system,
maintained his vicious sense of humor, and emerged from some difficult times
happy, successful, and determined to change prevailing attitudes about disability,
potential, normalcy, and employment. He shares all of his experiences and
lessons learned in a straightforward way that does not allow pity or ego to
enter the picture. He describes his own brand of faith and sheds some light
on our collective humanity.
Fries, K. (1997). Body, remember. New York: Plume.
In this memoir, Kenny Fries explores his life and experiences with his
disability. Having been born with congenital deformities that affected the
lower part of his body, Fries searches medical records, talks with family
and friends, and examines past relationships in order to better understand
his disability. In addition to an understanding of his physical body, Fries
also explores his sexuality and personal relationships. This is a memoir
about disability, but it is also about the discovery and understanding of
his identity.
Grealy, L. (1994). Autobiography of a face. New York: HarperCollins.
Autobiography Of A Face is Lucy Grealy’s compelling account of
her experience with childhood cancer. The narrative’s starting point of view
is that of Grealy as a child, from her early diagnosis at age nine, replete
with the singular distinction of being sick and thus being special and not
having to turn in a book report, through surgery that removed half of her
jaw, almost three years of radiation and chemotherapy, to her growing awareness
that she is alone and experientially set apart from her family, her classmates,
and her physicians. The book chronicles her hospital and school experiences
(an encounter with her junior high guidance counselor is particularly poignant)
as well as her internal struggle to eschew the mirrors that reflect difference,
what she gradually realizes is, by society’s standards, her “ugliness” or
to embrace the mirrors that reflect liberation from image and instead reflect
the face of the self. Many issues converge in this account, including family
attitudes (bravery, not crying, and minimizing expressing pain are valued),
the cruelty of children, the medicalization of difference (Grealy underwent
15 years of surgery to “improve” her appearance), beauty and Beauty, and self-awareness
and freedom from the dictates of society.
Grandin, T. (1995). Thinking in pictures: And other reports from
my life. New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishers Groups, Inc.
Thinking In Pictures is about the childhood and development of
Temple Grandin, a woman with autism. She likens herself to the robotic character,
Data, on the science fiction television program, Star Trek: The Next Generation
. She says words are like a second language to her, noting that she thinks
primarily in images. Grandin, who holds a Ph.D. in animal science and has
designed equipment that revolutionized the livestock industry, proposes that
genius and autism may sometimes be closely related.
Hale, M .J. G., & Hale, Jr., C. M. (1999). “I had no means to
shout.” Bloomington, IN: 1st Books.
Charles Hale, a man with autism, discovered the communication technique
of facilitated communication (FC) when he was 36 years old, and this book
chronicles his life before and after he began to use FC through both Charles’
and his mother’s narratives. When he was a child, Hale was diagnosed as “trainably
mentally retarded,” and it was not until he began using FC that he discovered
he was autistic. The book opens with a history and discussion of the facilitated
communication method and the controversy surrounding the method. While the
book is primarily written by Mary Jane, Charles’ comments are liberally spread
throughout the text. While some of Charles’ narrative has been edited for
easier reading, the authors make a conscious choice to leave many of Charles’
passages as originally typed, so that reader can see the clear intended meaning
through errors made while using the method. The narrative provides, in Charles’
voice, a fascinating and detailed insiders’ perspective to what autism feels
like, how Charles’ apraxia and dyspraxia have affected his life and his communication,
and how FC allows Charles not to emerge from autism, but rather, to express
himself “as the intelligent, cognizant man he really is.”
Hockenberry, J. (1995). Moving violations: War zones, wheelchairs,
and declarations of independence. New York: Hyperion.
Moving Violations is an honest and often humorous account of Hockenberry’s
life as a man with a disability. He takes the reader on a journey in which
he reflects upon the events in his life, from the accident that, at age 19,
caused a spinal cord injury, to his work as a nationally renown broadcast
journalist. He does not flinch at talking about the personal aspects of disability.
And he shares the adventures of his career, such as riding a mule up a mountainside
with Kurdish refugees who were being driven from their land by the Iraqis
after Desert Storm. Hockenberry also explains how his disability, rather than
limiting him, is a window through which he frames his view of the world--how
it expands his gaze and gives him insight that defines who he is and what
he does.
Kennedy, M. J. (1994, February). The disability blanket. Mental
Retardation, 32(1), 74-76.
In this article, Michael Kennedy discusses his experiences being labeled
under the “blanket term disabled.” First, he talks about ways that privacy
is invaded under the disability blanket. This includes the degrading experience
of having to attend meetings and deal with reams of paperwork related to other
people’s ideas about goals for you. Second, he notes that under the disability
blanket you are always being evaluated, but are hardly ever asked to evaluate
the services you get. Third, everything you do must be part of a “program.”
He concludes by stating, “If we could get out from under the disability blanket,
the world would look different for us. We’d still get services but they wouldn’t
be programs…Professionals would treat us like they would want to be treated…We’d
hear about more of our options, and we’d get support in choosing what best
fit our wants and needs.”
Lubchenco, L. O., & Crocker, A. C. (1997). Bus girl: Poems by
Gretchen Josephson. Cambridge, MA: Brookline Books.
This book consists of 25 poems written by Gretchen Josephson, a woman with
Down syndrome. She started writing poetry while still in her teens, when she
began a job as a bus girl at a restaurant. Her poetry chronicles her life
experiences with family, friends, love, and other areas of life. The editors
have divided her poetry into sections, which include Bus Girl ,
Love for Always, Vacations and Travel , Family, Death and Greed
, Faith, and Other Poems . Unlike other artistic works such
as Musn’t Grumble edited by Lois Keith, Josephson does not write about
disability. Instead, she simply creates poetry about her life.
Mairs, N. (1997). Waist-high in the world: A life among the disabled.
Boston: Beacon Press.
Nancy Mairs, a brilliant essayist and poet who has authored six previous
books, reflects upon her experiences as a woman with multiple sclerosis in
Waist-High In The World. She discusses such topics as adjusting
to change, reconciling body image, experiencing sexuality and pleasure, and
seeking equality and justice. She also probes other disability issues, such
as assisted suicide and selective abortion, and she revisits an article she
once wrote for Glamour magazine that focused on young people with disabilities.
Mason, M. (2000). Incurably human. London: Working Press.
Simultaneously personal and philosophical, this book is both a celebration
of and call for inclusive communities and schools. Micheline Mason shares
some of her experiences growing up and living with a disability in London.
She challenges the dominant ideology of the medical model that suggests that
she and others with disabilities are broken and need to be fixed, stressing
that she is fully human as she is and does not need or desire a cure. The
book chronicles her personal journey from experiencing segregation and discrimination
to living a full life, fighting prejudice, and working for inclusive societies.
She has dedicated the book to Marsha Forest, Jack Pearpoint, Judith Snow,
John O’Brien, and Herb Lovett who “flew in as a team, crashed through our
British reserve and, in their generosity, gave us the language and the tools
of inclusion.” The book is divided into four sections: Exclusion Harms
Everyone, The Inclusion Movement , Inclusive Education ,
Glimpses of a Possible Future.
Mukhopadhyay, T. R. (2000). Beyond the silence: My life, the world
and autism. London: The National Autistic Society.
This work is an autobiographical narration of a young poet who happens
to be an autistic child and it includes a collection of his selected poems
with a foreword by Lorna Wing. Rajarshi Mukhopadhyay, known as Tito, wrote
this fascinating narration before he was 12 years old in July 2000. Tito
was also a subject of one hour-long BBC documentary and various newspaper
articles including one published in the New York Times . This work
represents a realistic presentation of what kind of struggle he and his parents
had to go through during his early childhood in his native country (India)
where intellectual disabilities like autism are hardly known or recognized.
As pointed out in the editor’s note, “To retain the integrity of Tito’s writing,
very little has been changed. Changes have only been made to ensure clarity,
and [ ] have been used where information has been added.” The work provides
a vivid description of the experience of living with autism in a country
like India and Tito’s thoughts about the meaning of life presented in a highly
philosophical and poetic manner. The book is divided into four sections. The
initial two sections present Tito’s autobiographical narration while the
remaining two sections present a collection of his selected poems.
Murphy, R. F. (1987). The body silent: An anthropologist embarks
on the most challenging journey of his life: Into the world of the disabled.
London and New York: W.W. Norton.
Robert Murphy, an anthropologist by trade, eloquently and honestly describes
how paralysis--and all disability--affects identity and interaction with others
based on their reactions to disability. This book is his anthropological field
trip to the world of disability, detailing his experiences and thoughts before,
during, and after he becomes paralyzed during his 40s. The journey is compelling
in itself and also offers a backdrop and source for inquiry into notions
of stigmatization, independence/dependence, physical condition, and normalcy.
This is a powerful book in which Murphy not only shares his personal story
but deals with and challenges the ableism and medical model of disability
he endures once he becomes disabled himself. It is split into three sections
of three chapters each: I. In the Beginning (Signs and Symptoms,
The Road to Entropy, The Return) II. Body, Self, and Society (The
Damaged Self, Encounters, The Struggle for Autonomy) III. On Living
(The Deepening Silence, Love and Dependency, There’s No Cure for Life).
Nolan, C. (1987). Under the eye of the clock. New York: Arcade
Publishing, Inc.
Christopher Nolan is an award-winning Irish poet and novelist who has cerebral
palsy, uses a wheelchair, and writes with a stick attached to his forehead
while someone cups his chin for stability. Under the Eye of the Clock
is his autobiography (told as the story of Joseph Meehan), a lyrical and
metaphorical account of his family, schooling, faith, and emergence as a celebrated
poet. Joseph communicates with eye movements, facial expressions, and body
language that his family and friends decode, and Joseph used his language
to tell his family and teachers at the Central Remedial Clinic School that
he wanted to attend the local comprehensive school. While his family is completely
supportive and respects Joseph’s autonomy, the board repeatedly turns down
Joseph’s application, but Joseph eventually is accepted at the comprehensive
school and finishes his primary education there. Nolan recounts his friendships
at school (including his and his mates’ adventures with smoking) and how
he was fully included in school trips and activities. Nolan also tells of
his struggle to communicate outside the realm of gestures, through intense
practice and training at typing. Typing releases the poet within, and
Joseph/Nolan writes his first book of poetry at age 15. While his accomplishments
are often framed in the International Year of Disabled People, distinguished
writers such as Brendan Kennelly recognize Nolan as a writer and poet outside
the framework of disability.
Panzarino, C. (1994). The me in the mirror. Seattle: Seal
Press.
Written by writer, disability activist, and artist Connie Panzarino,
The Me In The Mirror is an autobiography of the life of this amazing
woman. Born with Spinal Muscular Atrophy Type III, a rare disease, Panzarino
describes her life as one of struggles and triumphs, and tells the stories
of her relationships with her family, friends, lovers, her turn to lesbianism,
and of her years of pioneering work in the disability rights movement.
This book is a must read for anyone interested in understanding the experiences
of women with physical disabilities.
Sienkiewicz-Mercer, R., & Kaplan, S. B. (1989). I raise my eyes
to say yes. New York: Avon Books.
This is Ruth Sienkiewicz-Mercer’s powerful account, written with the assistance
of Steven Kaplan, of her incarceration in an institution for people labeled
mentally retarded. She vividly describes the abuse and neglect she experienced
in the institution, and the isolation from family and community. However,
the book ends with her description of her successful struggle to gain her
freedom, shatter stereotypes, and build a life in the community.
Sinclair, J. (1993). Don’t mourn for us. Our Voice, 1 (3).
Syracuse, NY: Autism Network International.
This article is addressed to parents of autistic children. The author begins
with a discussion of parents’ grief over having an autistic child. While some
amount of grief is natural, he emphasizes that continuing focus on the child’s
autism as a source of grief is damaging for both the parents and the child.
He urges parents to make radical changes in their perceptions of what autism
means: (1) autism is not an appendage, it isn’t something that a person has
or is trapped inside; (2) autism is not an impenetrable wall, though relating
to an autistic person takes more work and openness to different ways of relating
and understandings about relating to one another; and (3) autism is not death,
you didn’t lose a child to autism. In conclusion, he urges parents not to
mourn for what never was, but to join with their children in an exploration
of what is.
Trueman, T. (2000). Stuck in neutral. New York: Harper Collins
Publishers.
While this book is fiction, and closer to juvenile/young adult fiction
at that, it reads as a first person account. Terry Trueman’s narrator is
14-year-old Shawn McDaniel who has cerebral palsy, cannot control any of
his muscles, and does not speak. The story revolves around his father’s belief
that he must kill Shawn to “put him out of his misery” despite the obviously
positive relationships between Shawn and the rest of his family. Thus, the
narration becomes all of Shawn’s thoughts that remain unknown to those around
him, and even questioned by some. The book quickly delves in and out of family
issues, notions of mental retardation, and quality of life questions. Most
importantly, it stresses the importance of making the least dangerous assumption
and offers one example of what could be going on when we just don’t know for
sure.
Williams, D. (1992). Nobody, nowhere: The extraordinary autobiography
of an autistic. New York: Avon Books.
Donna Williams, who was diagnosed with autism when in her mid 20s, wrote
Nobody, Nowhere in an attempt to understand herself and to explore
how she fit into the world around her. She candidly describes the teasing
and mistreatment she experienced at the hands of her family and her ability
to use role-playing to interact with others. Williams said of her book, “This
is a story of two battles, a battle to keep out ‘the world’ and a battle to
join it. I have, throughout my private war, been a she, a you, a Donna,
and finally, an I.”
Williams, D. (1994). Somebody, somewhere: Breaking free from the
world of autism. New York: Times Books.
This autobiography by Donna Williams poignantly and defiantly illustrates
her life and struggle with autism. She powerfully articulates her "awakening
to the world" and how she fought for others to do the same. She presents
her perspective of autism and reminds readers that it is crucial that they
seek to understand her perspective and the perspectives of others with autism
rather that imposing their own notions onto someone else. She asserts
that she has taken control of her autism, that it does not control her.
Williams, D. (1996). Like colors to the blind. New York:
Times Books.
Like Colors To The Blind is Donna Williams’ third book about her life
as a person with autism. When she was diagnosed with autism at the age of
25, she wrote Nobody, Nowhere as an attempt to explore her experiences
as a person with autistic symptoms. In her sequel, Somebody, Somewhere
, she continued to analyze how role-playing and ritualistic behavior helped
her to cope with her environment, and how she was able to begin to replace
these mechanisms with genuine interactions. This, her latest work, builds
upon the last, addressing relationships and emotions. Williams describes her
relationship with Ian, who became her best friend and eventually her husband.
Willmuth, M., & Holcomb, L. (1994). Women with disabilities:
Found voices. Binghamton, NY: The Haworth Press, Inc.
Written almost entirely by woman with disabilities, Women with Disabilities:
Found Voices is a deeply personal and compelling discourse of the body,
violence, sexuality, and disability. The authors offer a multicultural perspective,
which speaks frankly about their experiences. They discuss the abuses they
have endured and explain how they have struggled with the issue of being a
woman with a body that does not conform to the image that society values.
Classics
Disability Studies existed before it had a name. That is, before there
was an area of academic inquiry named Disability Studies, theorists, researchers,
and writers examined disability as a social, cultural, or political phenomenon,
rather than a deficit residing within individuals. In this section, we identify
books and articles that helped provide a foundation for what we now refer
to as Disability Studies. Of course, each Disability Studies scholar would
probably come up with a different list of influential writings. This list
merely reflects Steve Taylor’s perspective.
Bogdan, R., & Biklen, D. (1977, March/April). Handicapism. Social
Policy, 7(4), 14-19.
In this article, Bogdan and Biklen examined “handicapism” as “a set of
assumptions and practices that promote the differential and unequal treatment
of people because of apparent or assumed physical, mental, or behavioral
differences.” The article was one of the first scholarly writings to make
parallels between racism and sexism, on the one hand, and systematic discrimination
and prejudice against people with disabilities, on the other. Today, the
term “ableism” is commonly used to represent what Bogdan and Biklen called
handicapism.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S.J. (1976). The judged, not the
judges: An insider’s view of mental retardation. American Psychologist,
31 (1), 47-52.
Bogdan and Taylor presented a life history, or sociological autobiography
constructed through open-ended interviews, of a man labeled mentally retarded
(given the pseudonym Ed Murphy). The article presented Ed Murphy’s account
of his experiences living in a “state school” for the mentally retarded and
his subsequent placement in the community. In a brief introduction and conclusion,
Bogdan and Taylor argued that mental retardation was a social construction
the existed in the minds of those who label others—the “judges”—and not in
the minds of those so labeled—the “judged.”
Dexter, L. A. (1960). On the politics and sociology of stupidity
in our society. Paper presented at the American Association
on Mental Deficiency. Reprinted in Mental Retardation
, 1994, 32(2), 152-55, with an introduction by Philip Ferguson.
Dexter critiqued the “common-sense assumptions about mental deficiency”
made by professionals. He reinterpreted “mental deficiency” by means of an
analogy to a hypothetical society in which people valued grace and style
in movement as our society values intelligence. He speculated that in such
a society, there would be discrimination against people who were clumsy—the
“gawkies”—not because they lacked the skills to participate in and contribute
to society, but simply because society would be designed to require grace
to perform rudimentary tasks. Through this analogy, Dexter argued that the
values and structure of society, rather than the characteristics of individuals,
were the reasons for discrimination against and exclusion of people labeled
mentally deficient.
Goffman, E. (1961). Asylums: Essays on the social situation
of mental patients and other inmates. Garden City: NY: Anchor
Books.
Goffman examined the characteristics of mental hospitals, prisons, and
other institutions and the devastating effects of institutionalization on
a person’s sense of self. One of Goffman’s major contributions was his definition
of the concept of total institutions: “A total institution may be defined
as a place of residence and work where a large number of like-situated individuals,
cut off from the wider society for an appreciable period of time, together
lead an enclosed, formally administered round of life.” Goffman’s definition
of total institutions allows us to see similarities between social organizations
that ostensibly serve different purposes.
Goffman, E. (1963). Stigma: Notes on the management of
spoiled identity. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
According to Goffman, a stigma is not merely a difference, but a characteristic
that deeply discredited a person’s identity and moral character. Goffman argued
that disabilities are stigmatizing and dominate a person’s identity in interactions
with others. Although Goffman and others probably over-stated the stigmatization,
rejection, and exclusion of people with disabilities and the influence of
others’ attitudes on people’s self-concepts, the notion of stigma is useful
for understanding how disability is constructed and interpreted in the society
at large.
Kesey, K. (1962). One flew over the cuckoo’s nest.
New York: Signet.
Kesey’s powerful and entertaining novel pitted the rebellious inmate Randall
P. McMuphy against Big Nurse and the oppressive authority of the mental hospital.
His novel can be read both as a vivid description of the depressing and dehumanizing
routines and practices at institutions and as a metaphor for the resistance
of human beings to conformity and compliance to authority.
Mercer, J. R. (1973). Labeling the mentally retarded: Clinical and
social system perspectives on mental retardation. Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press.
“Persons have no names and belong in no class until we put them in one,”
wrote Mercer. “Whom we call mentally retarded, and where we draw the line
between the mentally retarded and the normal, depend upon our interest and
the purpose of our classification.” In this study of people with mental retardation
in the community, Mercer distinguished between the clinical perspective that
classifies mental retardation as an objective condition and the social system
perspective that regards mental retardation as an acquired social status imposed
on people by others. Her clinical and social system perspectives parallel
the medical (deficit) and social model of disability found in Disability Studies
today. Mercer reported that schools, in particular, perpetuate the labeling
of people as mentally retarded, especially children from ethnic minorities.
The only drawback in her analysis is that she did not challenge the construct
of mental retardation itself, only the labeling by schools and other agencies
of people who otherwise blended into the community.
Roth, J. A. (1963). Timetables: Structuring the passage of time in
hospital treatment and other careers. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill.
Building on his role as a patient in a tuberculosis hospital, Roth examined
how people perceive and subjectively experience time. He showed how people
with a chronic illness develop norms and benchmarks to evaluate their progress
and treatment and how they may come into conflict with health care professionals
in constructing these timetables. He used his examination of people with a
chronic illness to explore how people in other situations experience time.
Rothman, D. J. (1971). The discovery of the asylum: Social order
and disorder in the new republic. Boston: Little, Brown.
Rothman traced the development of American asylums for poor people, people
with disabilities, criminals, orphans, and others in the Jacksonian era. According
to Rothman, the rapid development of asylums reflected an attempt to promote
the stability of society and cohesion of the community in a period in which
traditional ideas and practices were breaking down. Rothman rejected the
notion that asylums represented a step forward in the progress of civilization.
As he asked, “Was an organization that would eventually turn into a snake
pit a necessary step forward for mankind?”
Scott, R. A. (1969). The making of blind men: A study of adult socialization.
New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Scott argued that the behavior and attitudes characteristic of many people
with impaired vision are socially acquired and not inherent in their physical
condition. He focused his attention on agencies that serve blind people and
looked at the ways in which these agencies socialize people to think and act
as “blind.” Scott questioned whether agencies need blind people more than
blind people need the agencies designed to serve them.
Szasz, T. S. (1961). The myth of mental illness: Foundations of a
theory of personal conduct. New York: Delta and Szasz, T.S. (1970).
The manufacture of madness. New York: Delta.
In these two books and a host of other writings, Szasz, a controversial
psychiatrist, challenged the validity of the concept of mental illness. Building
on history, philosophy, and sociology, Szasz argued that mental illness is
a metaphor and does not exist in the same way as physical illnesses. Rather,
what is called mental illness reflects non-conformity with societal expectations.
Szasz critiqued “Institutional Psychiatry,” which he described as a threat
to individual freedom and autonomy.
Other Books, Chapters, and Articles
Due to space limitations and time constraints, this is a listing of the
many other books, chapters, and articles concerning Disability Studies. Information
on more recent scholarly research and literature on disability are reviewed
in periodicals such as Disability Studies Quarterly and the discussion
logs of the on-line group, H-Disability .
Adams, R. (2001). Sideshow U.S.A.: Freaks and the American cultural
imagination. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Albrecht, G. L. (1992). The disability business: Rehabilitation in
America [Sage Library of Social Research Vol. 190]. Newbury Park:
Sage Publications.
Allen, J. D. (2003). Gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender people
with developmental disabilities and mental retardation: Stories of the Rainbow
Support Group. Binghamton, NY: Harrington Park Press.
Asch, A. (2001). Critical race theory, feminism, and disability: Reflections
on social justice and personal identity. Ohio State Law Journal, 62
(1), 391-425.
Attwood, F. (1998). Weird lullaby: Jane Campion’s The Piano .
Feminist Review, 58, 85-101.
Barile, M. (2002). Disablement and feminization of poverty. Women
in Action, 2, 49-56.
Batson, T., & Bergman, E. (Eds.). (2002). Angels and outcasts:
An anthology of Deaf characters in literature (3rd ed.). Washington,
DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Bauby, J. (1998). (J. Leggatt, Trans.) The diving bell and
the butterfly: A memoir of life in death. New York: Vintage Books.
Begum, N. (1992). Disabled women and the feminist agenda.
Feminist Review, 40, 70-84.
Block, P. (2000). Sexuality, fertility, and danger: Twentieth-century images
of women with cognitive disabilities. Sexuality and Disability, 18
(4), 239-254.
Branson, J., & Miller, D. (2002). Damned for their difference:
The cultural construction of Deaf people as disabled: A sociological history.
Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Breslin, M. L., & Yee, S. (Eds.). (2002). Disability rights law
and policy: International and national perspectives. Ardsley, NY:
Transnational Publishers.
Brown, S. E. (2000). A celebration of diversity: An annotated bibliography
about disability culture. Las Cruces, NM: Institute on Disability
Culture.
Brownworth, V. A., & Raffo, S. (Eds.). (1999). Restricted access:
Lesbians on disability. Seattle: Seal Press.
Burrell, P.M. (1999). Feminism and disability. Social Science
Journal, 36(1), 189.
Butler, R., & Parr, H. (Eds.) (1999). Mind and body spaces: Geographies
of illness, impairment and disability [Critical Geographies]. London
and New York: Routledge.
Campbell, F. A. (2000). Eugenics in disguise? Law, technologies,
and negotiating the ‘problem’ of disability. Australian Feminist Law
Journal, 14, 55-70.
Carlson, L. (2001). Cognitive ableism and Disability Studies: Feminist
reflections on the history of mental retardation. Hypatia, 16
(4), 124-139.
Clayton, B. (1998). Forgotten prophet: The life of Randolph Bourne
[Reprint ed.]. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
Corker, M. (2001). “Disability”—The unwelcome ghost at the banquet and
the conspiracy of “normality.” Violence and Abuse Abstracts, 7
(3), 163-252.
Corker, M. (2001). Sensing disability. Hypatia, 16 (4), 34-52.
Corker, M., & French, S. (Eds.). (1999). Disability discourse
[Disability, Human Rights, and Society]. Berkshire, United Kingdom: Open
University Press.
Cousins, M. (1999). Disabling beauty: Alexa Wright. Portfolio
, 30, 10-15, 49, 52-53.
Crow, L. (2000). Helen Keller: Rethinking the problematic icon.
Disability & Society, 15(6), 845-859.
Cushing, P., & Lewis, T. (2002). Negotiating mutuality and agency in
care-giving relationships with women with intellectual disabilities.
Hypatia, 17(3), 173-193.
Daneli, A., & Woodhams, C. (2000). Researching equality and disability:
Taking methodological lessons from feminism? Management Research
News, 23, 50-52.
Devlieger, D., Rusch, F., & Pfeiffer, D. (Eds.). (2003). Rethinking
disability: The emergence of new definitions, concepts and communities.
Philadelphia: Garant/Coronet Books.
Donaldson, E. J. (2002). The corpus of the madwoman: Toward a feminist
Disability Studies theory of embodiment and mental illness. NWSA Journal,
14(3), 99-119.
Ellis, C. (1995). Final negotiations: A story of love, loss, and
chronic illness [Health, Society, and Policy]. Philadelphia: Temple
University Press.
Erevelles, N. (2000). Educating unruly bodies: Critical pedagogy,
Disability Studies, and the politics of schooling. Educational
Theory, 50(1), 25-47.
Ferri, B. A., & Gregg, N. (1998). Women with disabilities: Missing
voices. Women’s Studies International Forum, 21 (4),
429-439.
Finke, B. (2003). Long time, no see. Urbana and Chicago:
University of Illinois Press.
Fleischer, D. Z., & Zames, F. (2001). The disability rights movement:
From charity to confrontation. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Fox, A. M., & Lipkin, J. (2002). Res(Crip)ting feminist theater through
disability theater: Selections from the disAbility project. NWSA Journal,
14(3), 77-98.
Frank, A. W. (1997). The wounded storyteller: Body, illness, and
ethics. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Frank, G. (2000). Venus on wheels: Two decades of dialogue on disability,
biography, and being female in America. Berkeley: University of California
press.
Freeberg, E. (2001). The education of Laura Bridgman: First deaf
and blind person to learn language. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard
University Press.
Gallagher, H. G. (1996). Black bird fly away: Disabled in an able-bodied
world. Clearwater, FL: Vandamere Press.
Gallagher, H. G. (1999). FDR's splendid deception [FDR Memorial
Edition]. Clearwater, FL: Vandamere Press.
Galli, R. (2001). Rescuing Jeffrey. New York: Griffin Trade
Paperback.
Gaventa, W. C., & Coulter, D. L. (Eds.). (2001). The theological
voice of Wolf Wolfensberger. Binghamton: The Haworth Pastoral Press,
Inc.
Gershick, T. J. (2000). Toward a theory of disability and gender.
Signs, 25(4).
Ghai, A. (2002). Disabled women: An excluded agenda of Indian feminism.
Hypatia, 17(3), 49-66.
Goggin, G., & Newell, C. (2003). Digital disability: The social
construction of disability in new media. Lanham, MD: Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Groce, N. (1986, May). "The town fool": An oral history of a mentally
retarded individual in small town society [Wenner-Gren Foundation
Working Papers in Anthropology]. New York: Wenner-Gren Foundation.
Guter, B., & Killacky, J. R. (Eds.). (2003). Queer crips: Disabled
gay men and their stories. Binghamton, NY: Harrington Park Press.
Hales, G. (Ed.). (1996). Beyond disability: Towards an enabling society.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Hall, K. Q. (2002). Feminism, disability, and embodiment.
NWSA Journal, 14(3), vii-xiii.
Handler, L. (1998). Twitch and shout: A Touretter's tale.
New York: Plume.
Hans, A., & Patri, A. (Eds.). (2003). Women, disability and identity.
Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Herndon, A. (2002). Disparate but disabled: Fat embodiment and Disability
Studies. NWSA Journal, 14(3), 120-137.
Herr, S. S., Gostin, L. O., & Koh, H. H. (Eds.). (2003). The
human rights of persons with intellectual disabilities: Different but equal.
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press.
Hershey, L. (2003). Disabled women organize worldwide. Off
Our Backs, 33(1&2), 16-18.
Hevey, D. (1992). The creatures that time forgot: Photography and
disability imagery. Routledge: London.
Holzer, B., Vreede, A., & Weigt, G. (Eds.). (2001). Disability
in different cultures: Reflections on local concepts. Germany: Transcript
Verlag.
Houston, R.A. (2002). Madness and gender in the long eighteenth century.
Social History, 27(3), 309-326.
Hubert, J. (2001). Madness, disability and social exclusion: The
archaeology and anthropology of 'difference' [One World Archaeology].
London and New York: Routledge.
Jackson, C. (2000). Waste and whiteness: Zora Neale Hurson and the
politics of eugenics. African American Review, 34 (4), 639-660.
Jenkins, R. (Ed.). (1998). Questions of competence: Culture, classification
and intellectual disability. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Johnson, M., & Shaw, B. (Eds.). (2001). To ride the public's
buses: The fight that built a movement. Louisville, KY: The
Advocado Press.
Johnstone, D. (1998). An introduction to Disability Studies.
London: David Fulton Publishers.
Jones, C. K. (2002). “Some world’s—wonder in chapel or crypt”: Elizabeth
Barrett Browning and disability. Nineteenth Century Studies, 16
, 21-35.
Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law. (2002). Civil
rights and human dignity: Three decades of leadership in advocacy for people
with mental disabilities. Washington, DC: Author.
Jung, K. E. (2002). Chronic illness and educational equity: The politics
of visibility. NWSA Journal, 14(3), 178-200.
Karp, D. A. (1996). Speaking of sadness: Depression, disconnection,
and the meanings of illness. Oxford and New York: Oxford University
Press.
Kuppers, P. (2003). Disability and contemporary performance: Bodies
on edge. London and New York: Routledge.
Kuusisto, S. (1998). Planet of the blind. New York: Random
House.
Lacom, C. (2002). Revising the subject: Disability as third dimension in
Clear Light of Day and You Have Come Back . NWSA
Journal, 14(3), 138-154.
Linneman, R. D. (2001). Idiots: Stories about mindedness and mental
retardation [Counterpoints: Studies in the Postmodern Theory of Education
Vol. 154]. New York: Peter Lang Publishing.
Luczak, R. (2003). Silence is a four-letter word: On art and deafness.
Minneapolis: The Tactile Mind Press.
Mairs, N. (1987). Plaintext. New York: HarperCollins.
Michalko, R. (1998). The two-in-one: Walking with Smokie, walking
with blindness [Animals, Culture, and Society]. Philadelphia: Temple
University Press.
Mitchell, D. T., & Snyder, S. L. (Eds.). (2001). Narrative prosthesis:
Disability and the dependencies of discourse [Corporealities: Discourses
of Disability]. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Munson, P. (2000). Stricken: Voices from the hidden epidemic of chronic
fatigue syndrome. Binghamton, NY: Haworth Press.
Nasdjj. (2003). The boy and the dog are sleeping. New York:
Ballantine Books.
Norden, M. F. (1994). The cinema of isolation: A history of physical
disability in the movies. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
O’Brien, M., with Kendall, G. (2003). How I became a human being:
A disabled man's quest for independence [Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography].
Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
Olkin, R. (2001). What psychotherapists should know about disability.
New York: Guilford Press.
Ototake, H. (2000). (G. Harcourt, Trans.). No one's perfect.
Japan: Kodansha International.
Parens, E., & Asch, A. (Eds.). (2000). Prenatal testing and disability
rights [Hastings Center Studies in Ethics]. Washington, DC: Georgetown
University Press.
Parker, S. (2002). Tumbling after: Pedaling like crazy after life
goes downhill. New York: Crown Publishing Group.
Pointon, A., & Davies, C. (Eds.). (1997). Framed: Interrogating
disability in the media. London: British Film Institute.
Preston, P. (1998). Mother father deaf: Living between sound and
silence. Boston: Harvard University Press.
Rogers, L. J., & Swadener, B. B. (Eds.). (2001). Semiotics &
dis/ability: Interrogating categories of difference. Albany: State
University of New York Press.
Rose, M. L. (2003). The staff of Oedipus: Transforming disability
in Ancient Greece [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann
Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Russell, M., & Malhotra, R. (2002). The political economy of disablement:
Advances and contradictions [Online]. Socialist Register 2002: A World
of Contradictions. Available:
http://www.yorku.ca/socreg/2002.html
Ryan, D. F., & Schuchman, J. S. (Eds.). (2002). Deaf people in
Hitler's Europe. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press in association
with the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
Scheff, T. J. (1999). Being mentally ill: A sociological theory
(3rd ed.). Hawthorne, NY: Aldine de Gruyter.
Schein, J. D. (1989). At home among strangers: Exploring the Deaf
community in the United States. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University
Press.
Seymour, W. (Ed.). (1998). Remaking the body: Rehabilitation and
change. London and New York: Routledge.
Silvers, A., Wasserman, D., & Mahowald, M. R. (1998). Disability,
difference, discrimination: Perspectives on justice in bioethics and public
policy [Point/Counterpoint: Philosophers Debate Contemporary Issues].
Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield Publishing.
Simmons, P. (2003). Learning to fall: The blessings of an imperfect
life. New York: Bantam Doubleday Dell.
Skloot, F. (2003). In the shadow of memory [American Lives
Series]. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
Smith, B., & Hutchison, B. (Eds.). (2004). Gendering disability.
Rutgers, NJ: Rutgers University Press.
Smith, R. C. (1996). A case about Amy [Health, Society, and
Policy]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Stroman, D. F. (2003). The disability rights movement: From deinstitutionalization
to self-determination. Lanham, MD: University Press of America, Inc.
Thomas, C. (1999). Female forms: Experiencing and understanding disability
[Disability, Human Rights, and Society]. Berkshire, United Kingdom: Open
University Press.
Thomson, R. G. (1996). Freakery: Cultural spectacles of the extraordinary
body. New York: New York University Press.
Thomson, R. G. (1999, Fall). The new Disability Studies: Inclusion or tolerance?
ADFL Bulletin, 31(1), 49-53. Available:
http://www.adfl.org/ADFL/bulletin/v31n1/311049.htm
Titchkosky, T. (2003). Disability, self, and society. Toronto:
University of Toronto Press.
Tremain, S. (Ed.). (1999). Bodies of knowledge: Critical perspectives
on disablement and disabled women. Toronto: Women’s Press.
Tucker, B. P. (1995). The feel of silence [Health, Society,
and Policy]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Van Cleve, J. V., & Crouch, B. A. (1989). A place of their own:
Creating the Deaf community in America. Washington, DC: Gallaudet
University Press.
Wade, C. M. (Ed.). (1993). Range of motion: Disability poetry, prose,
art. Albany, CA: KIDS Project/Squeaky Wheels Press.
Webb, R. C. (1994). Journey into personhood [Singular Lives:
The Iowa Series in North American Autobiography]. Iowa City: University of
Iowa Press.
Weimer, J. (1994). Back talk: Teaching lost selves to speak.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press
Wilson, J. C., & Lewiecki-Wilson, C. (2001). Embodied rhetorics:
Disability in language and culture. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois
University Press.
Zola, I. K. (2003). Missing pieces: A chronicle of living with a
disability. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
FILMS AND DOCUMENTARIES
Annotations
This section offers just a few, but some of the best films and documentaries
which are related to the field of Disability Studies. We have selected several
that are staples of the field and several others that reflect a variety of
perspectives within Disability Studies. In addition to the documentaries,
we have included several independent and foreign films that reflect Disability
Studies and do not perpetuate the ableism and stigmatization of disability
found in many Hollywood films. For a larger list of films, including major
motion pictures, you can visit Films Involving Disabilities. Their
web site is: http://www.caravan.demon.co.uk
Abandoned to their Fate (1997). Drawing from scholarly records,
institutional archives, original photography, and popular media, Philip M.
Ferguson traces the historical origins of the prejudice and segregation endured
by people with disabilities. This 30-minute film begins in the Middle Ages
and ends with today’s move towards independent living and school and community
inclusion. Organized in outline format with various types of media demonstrating
ideas, this film is excellent for professional development, teacher training,
and community awareness. For more information:
http://www.pdassoc.com/attf.html
Breathing Lessons (1996). The award-winning documentary,
Breathing Lessons, addresses what life as a person with a disability
is like from the perspective of Mark O’Brien. O’Brien, who is a poet and journalist,
is paralyzed and uses an iron lung. Through his poetry and his insightful
commentary, he reflects on such issues as the meaning of life, death, sex,
relationships, creativity, and religion. For more information:
http://www.pacificnews.org/marko/breathing-lessons.html
Brother’s Keeper (1992). The lives of the Ward brothers,
farmers in a rural community in upstate New York, are disrupted when the
oldest brother, Bill, dies and his brother, Delbert, is accused of his murder.
Brother’s Keeper focuses on the outpouring of support Delbert received from
the community. To the townspeople, the Ward boys, as they were affectionately
called--Bill, Delbert, Lyman, and Roscoe--were quiet men who lived in a run-down
shack and farmed the land on which they grew up. The film chronicles the
events surrounding Bill’s death and Delbert’s trial, including the townspeople’s
efforts to raise funds for Delbert’s defense, their support of his innocence,
and their refusal to see the Ward brothers through the lens of mental retardation.
For more information:
http://www.sid-ss.net/slcnys/thewards.htm
Burton Blatt: Revisiting the Vision (1995). Through a series
of clips from various conferences and talks, viewers are able to revisit the
original and inspirational words of the late Burton Blatt. Blatt discusses
institutional life, reactions to his and Fred Kaplan’s Christmas in Purgatory
, the questionable notion of improving institutional life, and inclusive
education. Blatt knew then what we struggle with today. He is remembered for
stressing and achieving goals tied to values. His optimism, humor, and passion
are central to this collection. This video is included in the media package,
Revisiting the Vision: Selected Works of Burton Blatt, which
also includes a CD-ROM containing historic photographs from Christmas
in Purgatory and The Family Album . For more information:
http://thechp.syr.edu/HumanPolicyPress/
The Color of Paradise (1999). This Iranian film focuses on the
relationships between an 8-year-old boy who is blind and his unaccepting
father and caring grandmother. The boy returns home from his separate school
for summer recess and viewers witness a very different boy, happy and alive,
than the “bad lot” his father feels he’s been dealt. Through their interactions,
the film covers family issues, notions of a “healthy” child, and views of
disability. Visually stunning and emotionally challenging, this is a beautiful
film on several levels. For more information:
http://www.sonypictures.com/classics/colorofparadise/
The Community Imperative (2002). In 1979, the Center on Human Policy,
under the leadership of Burton Blatt, issued The Community Imperative
, a declaration supporting the right of all people with disabilities to
community living to counter opposition to deinstitutionalization and community
inclusion by well-organized groups. Today, years later, inclusion remains
controversial in some states and localities. At the same time, many people
with disabilities are not receiving the supports they need to live successfully
in the community. This video, provided in both VHS and DVD formats, is a documentary
of a conference held in Oakland, California in 2002 to revisit the values
underlying The Community Imperative . It features segments of presentations
by and interviews with several California and national leaders. It also includes
clips of historical leaders Burton Blatt, Gunnar Dybwad, and Ed Roberts.
Narrated by Martin Sheen, the video recounts the history of community living
and describes the challenges to achieving inclusion today. For more information:
http://thechp.syr.edu/HumanPolicyPress/
Credo for Support (1996). This powerful 5-minute video set
to music (Ennio Morricone, The Mission soundtrack) offers a series
of suggestions for people who care about and support someone with a disability.
It prompts viewers to question the common perceptions of disability, professionalism,
and support. Designed for use in presentations, in service, staff training,
and orientation programs, this video can be a provocative catalyst for a dialogue
on these issues. For more information:
http://www.normemma.com/credwait.htm
Dance Me to My Song (1998). This Australian film and Cannes
selection was written by and stars Heather Rose, a woman with cerebral palsy
who uses a computer to communicate. The film features Rose’s exceptional acting
and a powerful exploration of sexuality, friendship, and daily support issues.
This is a strong film that deals with life issues and comes highly recommended.
Disability is not demonized, defined as tragedy or deficiency, focused on
as something to overcome, used to teach a lesson, or any of the other common
misrepresentations in film. It is an important part, but clearly not the
only part, of Rose’s character as she lives her life. For more information:
http://www.vertigoproductions.com.au/dance.html
Disability Identity and Culture (no date). This bold and
controversial selection in the Tools for Change series includes the
experimental documentary Disability Culture Rap. Featuring Cheryl
Marie Wade, this documentary takes a fresh look at what it means to be disabled
in America. Through hundreds of images and a high-energy delivery,
this is disability in our own words: who we say we are. Not the usual anthropological
study of disabled people as specimens, we uncover the issues that set our
souls on fire: freedom of choice, disability pride, independent living,
the power of language and images, sexuality, community, and the right to
live with dignity. For more information:
http://www.selfadvocacy.org/Module%20Five.htm
Educating Peter (1992). This Academy Award winning documentary
highlights one third grade classroom's year long efforts at inclusive education.
It is a rare snapshot of classroom life, this one from Blacksburg, Virginia.
While the title infers a focus on Peter, a student with Down syndrome, the
film's success is in its depiction of all that goes in to this school's daily
efforts at teaching all students. It will invariably raise many issues in
the discussion of inclusive vs. "special" education and will be a good tool
for future teachers to observe and critique.
Graduating Peter (2003). This follow-up documentary to Educating
Peter picks up with Peter in middle school and highlights his journey through
his final year of high school. Peter finds himself in several different places
than his classmates as he ages through the school system and receives a certificate
of attendance upon graduation. This film will again raise many issues around
inclusive education by showcasing one school's interpretation of least restrictive
environment. Key to this interpretation are definitions of disability and
assumptions about potential that are central to Disability Studies. For
more information:
http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/graduating_peter/
The Eighth Day (1996). This Belgian film (French with English
subtitles) is about the relationship forged between two men as they try to
find happiness and love in their lives. In addition to many other qualities,
one of the men has Down syndrome. Both lead actors shared the 1996 Best Actor
prize at Cannes. Though the movie falls into several traps of representing
disability, it is noteworthy that Pascal Duquenne has Down syndrome considering
that many actors with disabilities are still denied roles and many able-bodied
actors continue to present their interpretations of characters with disabilities.
For more information: http://us.imdb.com/Details?0116581
The Execution of Wanda Jean (2003). This documentary about
the execution of an African-American lesbian who killed her lover explores
the humanity of both the death penalty and the label of mental retardation.
The claim by Wanda Jean’s lawyers that she is mentally retarded and therefore
unfit to be executed raises all aspects of this ongoing discussion. This personal
look at Death Row, the power of labels, and the finality of the death penalty
is unforgettable. For more information:
http://www.hbo.com/docs/programs/wanda/
Extreme Court Blues (2001). Framed in the context of the
Alabama v. Garrett Supreme Court decision, this video chronicles
the backlash to this decision at the University of Illinois Chicago—the formation
of the National Disabled Students Union (NDSU). The video is organized speeches
given by rally and NDSU organizers; the speakers consistently make comparisons
between disability issues and civil rights (comparing the reaction to the
Garrett decision with the SNVCC and the Deaf President Now movement).
Speakers also address issues such as tokenism, the history of institutionalization,
eugenics, and sterilization, federal intervention in states’ rights (e.g.,
comparison between the Garrett decision and the Pierce veto of a federal land
grant for Dix’s establishment of an asylum), the Independent Living movement,
Not Dead Yet, and access to the general public education curriculum for students
with disabilities.
Freaks (1932). Tod Browning’s classic horror film about actual
circus performers who exact revenge on a mendacious trapeze artist was shelved
for years due to the controversy it created. Viewers were shocked that Browning’s
actors actually had disabilities and refused to be subjected to such “grotesque
figures.” The film deals well with notions of ableism, beauty, and relationships.
This genre film forces viewers to confront issues of normality and humanity
central to Disability Studies. For more information:
http://freaks.cinephiles.net/
Going to School-Ir a la Escuela (2001). Going To School-Ir
a la Escuela tells a memorable story about inclusion, special education,
and empowering children with disabilities and their parents. The film shares
the daily experiences of students with disabilities who attend middle and
elementary schools in Los Angeles, revealing the determination of parents
to see that their children receive a quality education. The issues of respect,
civil rights, and education for all children are universal and poignantly
conveyed. "Highly recommended" for both undergraduate and graduate level studies
and for K-12 students, parents and educators. Commissioned by the Class Member
Review Committee of the Chanda Smith Consent Decree. For more information:
http://richardcohenfilms.com/GoingtoSchool.htm
Hurry Tomorrow (1975). Hurry Tomorrow is a powerful
statement about the violation of human rights of people being treated involuntarily
in a state psychiatric hospital in California in 1974. The film provides a
visual record of the daily lives of patients being tied down with cuffs and
straps, forcibly medicated with powerful tranquilizers, reducing them to
helpless zombie like states. This cinema verité classic illustrates
how individuals struggle to maintain their dignity in a dehumanized environment.
The film withstood an effort to have it banned in California and instead served
to help organize ex-patient groups around the country, and to initiate an
investigation into patient deaths in state hospitals. For more information:
http://richardcohenfilms.com/hurry_tomorrow.html
In the Land of the Deaf (1993). This French film is a documentary
about Deaf culture. It touches on many aspects and issues of Deaf culture
in a way that other films have not. From an instructor in sign language to
a voice teacher pushing her students to speak, from a family’s love to a woman’s
wrongful institutionalization, and much more, this film covers much of the
spectrum in a straightforward manner. For more information:
http://www.alliancefrancaise.com.hk/events/fcp25/24.html
Johnny Got His Gun (1971). This film based on the 1939 novel
by Dalton Trumbo, written and directed by Trumbo, explores the consequences
of war through the experiences of a man rendered blind, deaf, and immobile
by bombing. While the hospital staff view him as helpless and worthless, he
begins to piece his story together and viewers hearing his thoughts recognize
the horrific dangers of assuming anyone is incompetent or without value. For
more information:
http://www.eufs.org.uk//films/johnny_got_his_gun.html
King Gimp (2000). This Academy Award winning documentary
featuring Dan Keplinger, an artist with cerebral palsy, is a must-see. It
spans the thirteen years from his experiences in a separate “special” elementary
school to his college life and the development of his artistic skills and
goals. Dan’s sense of humor and determination emerge as themes, as well as
his struggles with inaccessibility and the tendency (during college) to be
a friend but not a boyfriend. The film deals well with the problems of assuming
deficiency based on body type and physical appearance. For more information:
http://www.kinggimp.com/flash.html
Liebe Perla (1999). This powerful documentary highlights
the friendship of two women while revisiting the Nazi’s treatment of people
with disabilities. The women, a young disability advocate researching the
treatment of little people during the Holocaust and an 80-year-old concentration
camp survivor, are similar only in that they are both called short-statured.
The film is in German and Hebrew with English subtitles. It is a provocative
film that is best viewed with time for discussion afterwards. For more information:
http://www.disabilityworld.org/07-08_01/arts/perla.shtml
My Flesh and Blood (2003). This 2003 Sundance Documentary
Feature Audience Award winner follows a year in the life of a family of thirteen
children with various disabilities headed by a single parent. Honest and touching,
the film explores the definition of family while shattering many commonly
held assumptions of disability as tragedy and deficiency. What is a “traditional”
family? Who is family? Central to this film is the idea that all of these
kids are kids first. For more information:
http://chaikenfilms.com/Frameset(films).html
No Apologies (1994). This 28-minute video is by Wry Crips
Disabled Women's Theatre, which is a comedy troupe of women who are at the
forefront of the disability culture movement in the San Francisco Bay area.
It is comprised of disabled and able-bodied women of diverse racial, social,
and class background. Wry Crips uses humor as a form of resistance. Their
performances, comprised of poetry, readings, signing, performing skits, and
reading narratives, all resist medical paradigms, social stereotypes, economic
oppression, or individualist assumptions regarding disability issues. The
women of Wry Crips embrace disability, seeing beauty and acceptance where
able-bodied people only see difference and abnormality. For more information:
http://www.lustydevil.com/fatgirl/wrycrips.html
Regular Lives (1988). Regular Lives was produced in 1988
for PBS by the Academy Award winning directors Gerardine Wurzburg and Tom
Goodwin; Syracuse University professor Douglas Biklen was its Executive Producer.
The documentary explores inclusion of students with disabilities in elementary
and secondary classes and includes interviews with teachers, a school principal,
and parents. A concluding segment shows young adults with disabilities living
on their own in their communities. Themes include the least dangerous assumption,
school and community citizenship, and the value of diversity. For more information:
http://teacher.shop.pbs.org/product/index.jsp?productId=1407524
Self-Advocacy: Freedom, Equality, and Justice for All (no date).
This award-winning video is part of the ACT series, Tools for Change
. Narrated by writer, performer, and activist Cheryl Marie Wade, this program
combines interviews, archival footage, and photographs to describe dominant
historical models of disability and the roles self-advocates can and are now
playing in determining their own lives. From the moral and medical models
to the minority group model to the independent living and disability rights
movements, Wade charts the course that has led to the present and offers the
framework for self-advocates to continue to develop their voice and maintain
the efforts towards inclusive societies. For more information:
http://www.selfadvocacy.com/Module%20One.htm
Self Advocates Becoming Empowered (1997). Self Advocates Becoming
Empowered is about people with cognitive disabilities forming a national organization
to work on issues they deem important, such as closing institutions, exercising
their rights as citizens, supporting people to live in communities, and opposing
injustice in the criminal justice system. Likening their movement to the
civil rights movement of the 60s, many of the advocates speak out about the
importance of their mission to people with disabilities. For more information:
http://thechp.syr.edu/HumanPolicyPress/SABE_video.html
Selling Murder: The Killing Films of The Third Reich (1991).
This is a chilling Nazi propaganda film about the genocide of people with
disabilities during the Second World War. Under what the Third Reich termed
the “hereditary health law,” they convinced doctors that killing people with
mental or physical disabilities was for their own good, and the good of the
Aryan nation at large. The original film makers used shadows and poor lighting
to make people seem grotesque, and played on the medical model of disability
in terms of what is “abnormal” and “normal,” and even “human” and “not human.”
This is a powerful film that should generate interesting discussions if used
in a Disability Studies class. Please note: This film was aired on the
Discovery Channel a few years ago, and we are not sure of its availability,
but it is definitely worth a good search. For more information on people with
disabilities during the Holocaust:
http://www.ushmm.org/research/library/bibliography/handicapped/right.htm#film
Sound and Fury (2001). This Academy Award nominee for Best
Documentary follows one extended family on their journey as two sets of parents
deal with the question of getting cochlear implants for their deaf children.
This is an intense film that is sure to inspire excellent discussion about
the nature of cures in general, but specifically around the value of the implants.
The film educates viewers about Deaf culture and raises problematic societal
issues around diversity, humanity, and membership that continue today. It
is challenging, effective, and entertaining. For more information:
http://www.pbs.org/wnet/soundandfury/
Taylor's Campaign (1998). Taylor’s Campaign
is a humorous and insightful look at hardworking people living in cardboard
lean-tos and dumpster diving for survival in Santa Monica, California. When
local lawmakers threaten to suspend their civil rights in a drive to sweep
the streets of "the homeless," a destitute ex-truck driver who became disabled
in an auto accident decides to run for city council on a platform of tolerance.
This video has been described as "the best film on homelessness in this era...an
invaluable resource for teaching about poverty." Recommended for all
age levels. For more information:
http://richardcohenfilms.com/taylor's.html
Titicut Follies (1967). Although more than 30 years old,
Titicut Follies remains a classic, depicting institutional
life in a mental health facility. The 1967 Wiseman film is named for and
centers around a talent show, the Titticut Follies, held for the inmates
of the Bridgewater State Mental Hospital, in Massachusetts. While scenes
from the talent show are disbursed throughout the film, the stark reality
of daily life in the institution is revealed. There is little regard for
the inmates’ human dignity; not only is what they have to say dismissed,
but they are subjected to strip searches, lack of privacy, ridicule, and
isolation. Titticut Follies is a grim film that reflects the barren
existence of life in a mental hospital. For more information:
http://www.zipporah.com/index.html
and http://www.subcin.com/titicut.html
Tools for Building a Self-Advocacy Group (2000). This instructional
video presents specific steps and tools for building a self-advocacy group.
Part of the Self-Advocacy Start-Up Toolkit developed by Self Advocates
Becoming Empowered (SABE), it includes the philosophy of self-advocacy and
challenges viewers to work to make it happen in their lives. The start-up
process is broken into five sections: Starting Groups, Working on Issues,
Self-Advocates and Self-Determination, Advisor Issues, and Materials
on The Self-Advocacy Movement. For more information on the Toolkit
: http://thechp.syr.edu/HumanPolicyPress/toolkit.html
Twitch and Shout (1995). This is a must-see documentary about living
with Tourette Syndrome (TS) made by photojournalist Lowell Handler who has
TS himself. The film explores what TS is, what it means to live with it, and
people’s reactions to the tics that are its physical manifestation. TS is
reclaimed and reframed in terms of life energy. Handler calls out notions
of normality as he weaves together the immediately appealing stories of four
successful adults. The film should challenge viewers to rethink notions of
human value and individual differences. For more information:
http://www.blinddogfilms.com/twitchandshout/
Vital Signs: Crip Culture Talks Back (1997). In the documentary
Vital Signs: Crip Culture Talks Back, participants in a national
Disability and the Arts conference explore the politics of disability through
their performances, which include such texts as art, fiction, poetry, stand-up
comedy, drama, and personal stories. It features such disability rights activists
as Cheryl Marie Wade, Mary Duffy, and Harlan Hahn, and also includes group
debates and behind-the-scenes conversations. The film also addresses the culture
of disability and the shared struggle people with disability have in gaining
access to influential cultural institutions. For more information:
http://www.fanlight.com/catalog/films/230_vs.shtml
When Billy Broke his Head... And Other Tales of Wonder (1995).
First premiering on PBS in 1995, this film by Billy Golfus explores the concept
of disability rights and takes a close look at the disability rights movement
and those involved. Golfus, who has a traumatic brain injury, intertwines
his story with the experiences of others who are struggling for their rights.
This is a must see. For more information:
http://www.fanlight.com/catalog/films/136_wbbhh.shtml
Due to space limitations and time constraints, we are including a listing
of some of the many other emerging films and documentaries that are now available
concerning Disability Studies:
A Little History Worth Knowing
Bong and Donnell
The Collector of Bedford Street
Elling
How’s Your News?
If I Can’t Do It
Lifestyles of the Poor and Unknown
Living with Grace
Losing It
My Country
Off Track
On the Road with Temple
Out of Sight
Patterns
People in Motion: Changing Ideas about People with Disabilities
Positive Images
Profoundly Normal
Rachael in Middle School
Rachael, Being Five
Refrigerator Moms
Stairway to Heaven
Tru Confessions
Us and Them
Waiting for Ronald
Willowbrook: The Last Great Disgrace
Disability & Society
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/carfax/09687599.html
Disability & Society is an international journal providing
a focus for debate about such issues as human rights, discrimination, definitions,
policy and practices. It appears against a background of change in the ways
in which disability is viewed and managed.
Definitions of disability are more readily acknowledged to be relative;
custodial approaches are seen as inadequate and unacceptable--placing greater
emphasis on community care and integration. However, policy intentions may
not have the desired effects on the realities of everyday practice and policy
changes themselves may be merely cosmetic, or appropriate but unfunded.
While publishing articles that represent all the professional perspectives,
the journal also provides an opportunity for the consumers of the services
to speak for themselves.
Disability & Society recently made its entire Table
of Contents, beginning with Volume One, available on-line.
Disability Studies Online Magazine
http://www.disabilitystudies.com
This is an online magazine focusing on the academic field of Disability
Studies and interdisciplinary discussions of disability. The focus is to
consider disability within the framework of society, rather than as individual
pathology. Viewing disability in this context one can see the connections
and relevance of disability to a wide variety of disciplines, including:
geography, sociology, medicine, social work, social policy, architecture,
art history, anthropology, comparative religions, philosophy, law, popular
culture, media and film, literature, history, women studies, and education
to name a few.
Disability Studies Quarterly
http://www.dsq-sds.org
The Disability Studies Quarterly (DSQ )
is published for the Society for Disability Studies. It is a multidisciplinary
and international journal of interest to social scientists, scholars in the
humanities, disability rights advocates, and others concerned with the problems
of people with disabilities. The purpose of the Quarterly
is to provide a place where people from diverse backgrounds can share ideas
and to engage in dialogues that cut across disciplinary backgrounds and substantive
concerns. The Quarterly is committed to developing theoretical
and practical knowledge about disability and to promoting the full and equal
participation of persons with disabilities in society.
Journal of Disability Policy Studies
http://www.proedinc.com/jdps.html
The only journal devoted exclusively to disability policy topics and issues.
For more than a decade, the Journal of Disability Policy Studies
(JPDS) has addressed compelling, variable issues in ethics,
policy, and law related to individuals with disabilities. JPDS
addresses a broad range of topics on disability policy from the perspectives
of a variety of academic disciplines and publishes articles pertaining to
both macro-policy issues (such as the social constructions which direct and
constrain policymakers) and micro-policy issues (such as legislative remedies
and regulatory matters).
Kaleidoscope
http://www.udsakron.org/kaleidoscope.htm
Kaleidoscope Magazine examines the experiences of disability
through literature and the fine arts. Unique to the field of Disability Studies,
this award-winning publication expresses the experiences of disability from
the perspective of individuals, families, healthcare professionals, and society
as a whole. The material chosen for Kaleidoscope challenges
and overcomes stereotypical, patronizing, and sentimental attitudes about
disability. Although content always focuses on a particular aspect of disability,
writers with and without disabilities are welcome to submit their work.
Mouth
http://www.mouthmag.com/
This thought-provoking magazine features investigative journalism,
news, and interviews with disability rights activists, reserving some of
its harshest criticism for the "helping professions." Mouth
also publishes poetry and essays written by people with disabilities, and
does not include commercial advertisements.
The Ragged Edge (formerly The Disability Rag)
http://www.ragged-edge-mag.com/
Ragged Edge is successor to the award-winning periodical,
The Disability Rag. In Ragged Edge , and
on their web site, you'll find the best in today's writing about society's
"ragged edge" issues: medical rationing, genetic discrimination, assisted
suicide, long-term care, attendant services. They cover the disability
experience in America--what it means to be a crip living at the end of the
20th century.
Research in Social Science and Disability
http://www.socscinet.com/sociology/rssd/
Research in Social Science and Disability is an annual volume
published by JAI Press/Elsevier. While not a standard periodical, it is devoted
to the scholarly, social scientific analysis of significant issues in disability.
The multidisciplinary approach permits contributors to explore the social
origins of disability in society, and provides a basis for examining cross-cultural
differences in approaches to disability, as well as the economic, social and
psychological consequences for individuals, families and social institutions
and organizations. This series will include research framed by a variety of
theoretical perspectives and research methodologies.
The Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal
http://www.rds.hawaii.edu/
The Center on Disability Studies at University of Hawaii at Manoa
announced the publication of this new journal. The Review will contain
peer-reviewed research articles, essays, and bibliographies relating to the
culture of disability and people with disabilities. It will also publish
forums on disability topics brought together by forum editors of international
stature. Poetry, short stories, creative essays, photographs, and artwork
related to disability are also invited. Forms for subscriptions and submission
guidelines are available to download on the above web site.
SPECIAL/FEATURE ISSUES OF PERIODICALS
This section contains information on selected special or feature issues
of periodicals related to Disability Studies published in journals and periodicals
that may not be typical Disability Studies publications.
Blackford, K., Cuthbertson, C., Odette, F., & Ticoll, M. (1993, Summer).
Women and disability [Feature issue]. Canadian Women’s Studies, 13
(4).
The editors of this issue are feminists, most of whom have disabilities,
who identify the contributors as feminist disability theorists who insist
that the personal is political. The issue includes articles by women from
backgrounds that vary in class, race, ethnicity, and sexual or gender orientation
in order to highlight the diversity in the lives of women with disabilities.
Many of the authors raise questions that challenge traditional feminist thinking
(about the body, about reproductive rights, about objectification and about
language, for example), while others relate personal experiences or provide
information on studies conducted with women with disabilities.
Breckenridge, C. A., & Vogler, C. (Eds.). (2001, October). The critical
limits of embodiment: Reflections on disability criticism [Special issue].
Public Culture, 13(3).
Disability Studies, a new field of inquiry in the human sciences, has the
potential to unsettle many basic assumptions about the body, citizenship,
capital, and beauty. This special issue of Public Culture explores
disability criticism, an emergent subfield within Disability Studies.
Couser, G. T. (2000, June). Forum: The empire of the "normal": A forum
on disability and self-representation. American Quarterly, 52(
2).
This forum assesses the accessibility and value of autobiography (and related
genres) to people with disabilities.
Davis, L., & Linton, S. (1995, Fall). Disability Studies [Feature
issue]. Radical Teacher, No. 47.
Radical Teacher is a “socialist and feminist journal on
the theory and practice of teaching.” It is an independent magazine for educational
workers at all levels and in every kind of institution. This feature issue
is one of the first to examine and frame Disability Studies within several
academic disciplines.
Dorn, M., & Metzel, D. (2001, Fall). Theme: Disability geography: Commonalities
in a world of differences. Disability Studies Quarterly, 21
(4).
Literature on disability within the field of geography is rapidly expanding.
This issue brings together the work of 17 international disability geography
scholars, organized into two key themes: Voices and The Paradoxes of Policy.
Farnall, O., & Haller, B. (Eds.). (2001, Spring). Theme: Advertising
and people with disabilities. Disability Studies Quarterly, 21
(2).
Symposium on advertising and how it effects and is influenced by people
with disabilities.
Tremain, S. (1998, Summer). Theme: Disability Studies queered. Disability
Studies Quarterly, 18(3).
This issue of Disability Studies Quarterly includes papers
and reviews focusing on lesbians, gay men, bisexual people and transgendered
people with disabilities. The editor contends that analyses in Disability
Studies have not considered the differences made by sexual variation, that
there are areas that are neglected when the perspectives of those who are
not heterosexual or traditionally gendered are not taken into account. Her
hope is that this issue will suggest ways that Disability Studies could be
improved by employing sexual orientation and sexual identity as analytical
categories. The essays in the issue focus on forms of discrimination
experienced by disabled queers from within lesbian and gay communities, and
on how lesbians and gays with disabilities negotiate identity. Additionally,
a few of the reviews focus on books and films about lesbians, gay men, bisexual
people and transgendered people with disabilities.
Hall, K. Q. (Ed.). (2003, Fall). Feminist Disability Studies [Special issue].
NWSA Journal, 14(3).
NWSA Journal is the official publication of the National
Women’s Studies Association and publishes the most up-to-date, interdisciplinary,
multicultural feminist scholarship linking feminist theory with teaching and
activism. This special issue focuses on feminist Disability Studies
that draws upon and challenges analyses of bodily norms, identity, accommodation,
representation, and oppression in both feminism and Disability Studies. Feminist
Disability Studies also provides a theoretical framework for expanding an
understanding of historical and ideological connections between marginalized
embodiments, and the essays included in this volume address many of these
themes.
Kittay, E., Silvers, S., & Wendell, S. (Eds.). (2001). Special issue:
Feminism and disability. Hypatia, 16(4).
Hypatia is a journal for scholarly research concerning philosophy
and women's studies. The essays in this issue address theoretical dimensions
of understanding women's disability identity and seek to stimulate philosophical
thought about these situations. Among the excellent papers offered for
Hypatia's exploration of women and disability were works with a
different focus, one more concerned with concrete and practical aspects of
living with disability. The second part of this double issue examines personal
and political practical themes of disabled women's lives, in both North America
and other parts of the globe.
Kittay, E., Silvers, S., & Wendell, S. (Eds.). (2002). Feminism and
disability II. Hypatia, 17(3).
This is Part II of a special issue on feminism and disability. The articles
in Part II have a more practical orientation. The authors, who offer perspectives
on disability from India, Australia, the United States, and Canada, all bring
personal experience and practical concerns to their philosophical inquiry.
Kasnitz, D., & Shuttleworth, R. P. (Eds.). (2001, Summer). Theme: Engaging
anthropology in Disability Studies. Disability Studies Quarterly, 21
(3).
This feature issue presents papers that seek to engage the two fields of
anthropology and Disability Studies.
Lillie, T. (Ed.). (2000, Fall). Theme: Disability rights: From childhood
to adulthood. Disability Studies Quarterly, 20 (4).
This symposium offers some diverse perspectives on disability, generation
and the life course, and some of the ways in which such an approach can be
applied to Disability Studies and disability research in an international
context.
McRuer, R., & Wilkerson, A. L. (Eds.) (2003). Desiring disability:
Queer theory meets Disability Studies [Special issue]. GLQ: A Journal
of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 9(1-2).
GLQ is the leading journal in lesbian and gay studies. This
special issue marks the first time that a major academic journal has devoted
itself to the conjunction of queer and disabled theorizing.
Morse, T. A., Lewiecki-Wilson, C., Lindblom, K., Dunn, P. A., Brueggemann,
B., Kleege, G., Stremlau, T. M., Erin, J., & Wilson, J. C. (2003). Symposium:
Representing disability rhetorically. Rhetoric Review, 22
(2), 154-202.
The purpose of this symposium is to encourage discussion and scholarship
in the area of Disability Studies, specifically aimed towards “rhetoricians.”
It offers works in various disciplines all contributing to Disability Studies.
Stodden, R., & Dowrick, P. (Eds.). (2001, Winter). Theme: Supporting
students with disabilities in postsecondary education. Disability Studies
Quarterly, 21(1).
This special edition of Disability Studies Quarterly describes
a sample of emerging work supported by and related to the efforts of the National
Center for the Study of Postsecondary Educational Supports (NCSPES). Research
has begun to shed new light upon the barriers faced by individuals with disabilities
seeking to access and participate in postsecondary education programs.
Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD)
P.O. Box 540666
Waltham, MA 02454
Phone: 781-788-0003 (v/t)
Fax: 781-788-0033
E-mail: AHEAD@ahead.org
http://www.ahead.org/
AHEAD is an international organization of professionals committed to the
full participation of individuals with disabilities in higher education. The
Association provides programs, workshops, publications, and conferences that
promote “excellence through education, communication and training.”
Center on Disability Studies
University of Hawai'i at Manoa
1776 University Avenue
Honolulu, HI 96822
Phone: 808-956-9972
Fax: 808-956-3162
http://www.cds.hawaii.edu/
The Center on Disability Studies (CDS) was established in 1988 as the Hawaii
University Affiliated Program at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and is
part of a National Network of University Centers on Excellence in Disabilities
focused upon Education, Research, and Services.
Center on Human Policy
Syracuse University, School of Education
805 South Crouse Avenue
Syracuse, NY 13244-2280
Phone: 315-443-3851(voice)
TTY: 315-443-4355
FAX: 315-443-4338
Toll free: 1-800-894-0822
E-Mail: thechp@sued.syr.edu
http://thechp.syr.edu
The Center on Human Policy (CHP) is a Syracuse University based policy,
research, and advocacy organization involved in the national movement to
insure the rights of people with disabilities. Since its founding, the Center
has been involved in the study and promotion of open settings (inclusive
community opportunities) for people with disabilities. The Center is involved
with a broad range of local, statewide, national and international activities,
including policy studies, research, information and referral, advocacy, training
and consultation, and information dissemination.
Institute for Disability Culture
Steven E. Brown, Founder
Institute on Disability Culture
3029 Lowrey Ave., Apt. P-2104
Honolulu, HI 96822-1813 USA
E-mail: Sbrown8912@aol.com
http://www.hometown.aol.com/sbrown8912/
The Institute’s mission since 1994 has been to promote pride in the history,
activities, and cultural identity of individuals with disabilities throughout
the world.
Society for Disability Studies
Department of Disability and Human Development
University of Illinois at Chicago (MC 626)
1640 W. Roosevelt Rd. #236
Chicago, IL 60608-6904
Phone: 312-996-4664 (V/TTY)
Fax: 312-996-7743
http://www.uic.edu/orgs/sds/
For the past sixteen years, the Society for Disability Studies
has worked to explore issues of disability and chronic illness from scholarly
perspectives. Membership includes social scientists, health researchers, and
humanities scholars as well as those active in the disability rights movement.
World Institute on Disability
510 16th Street, Suite 100
Oakland, California 94612
Voice: 510-763-4100
TTY: 510-208-9496
Fax: 510-763-4109
E-Mail: wid@wid.org
http://www.wid.org/
The World Institute on Disability (WID) is a nonprofit research,
public policy and advocacy center dedicated to promoting the civil rights
and full societal inclusion of people with disabilities. Organized by and
for people with disabilities, WID brings a diverse disability perspective
to public policy on health care, technology and employment.
SPECIAL INTEREST GROUPS (SIGs)
This is a listing of different professional organizations in a wide range
of disciplines that have Special Interest Groups (SIGs) concerning disability.
Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC),
Media & Disability Interest Group
http://www.towson.edu/~bhalle/aejdis.html
This SIG seeks to promote academic research into disability issues and
mass media; to reach out to the disability community at each AEJMC annual
meeting location; promote architectural, communication, and attitudinal accessibility
for people with disabilities at AEJMC annual meetings and all AEJMC activities;
and promote equal treatment and the necessary accommodations for students
and professors with disabilities in university settings as outlined in the
1990 Americans with Disabilities Act.
American Bar Association, Commission on Mental and Physical Disability
Law
http://www.abanet.org/disability/
This is the primary entity within the American Bar Association focusing
on the law-related concerns of persons with mental and physical disabilities.
Its mission is "to promote the ABA's commitment to justice and the rule of
law for persons with mental, physical, and sensory disabilities and their
full and equal participation in the legal profession." The Commission's members
include lawyers and other professionals, many of whom have disabilities.
American Education Research Association (AERA) SIG: Disability Studies
in Education
http://ced.ncsu.edu/2/dse/
Purpose: To encourage Disability Studies in education; to provide
an organizational vehicle for networking among Disability Studies researchers
in education; and to increase the visibility and influence of Disability Studies
among all educational researchers.
Association of American Geographers (AAG) Disability Specialty Group
(DSG): The Disability and Geography International Network (DAGIN)
http://courses.temple.edu/neighbor/service/disability&geography.html
To foster communication among members and to encourage research,
education, and service that addresses issues of disability and chronic illness,
this group will provide support and advocate with disabled members of the
Association while working closely with other specialty groups to promote common
interests and develop intradisciplinary and interdisciplinary projects.
Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) SIGs
http://www.ahead.org/resources/siglist.html
The Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) is a national
organization for disability service providers in higher education. AHEAD SIGs,
or Special Interest Groups, are AHEAD members organized around an interest
or concern. SIGs provide leadership to the AHEAD membership by providing information
and referral, organizing professional development opportunities, and networking
around a particular topic. AHEAD has had SIGs on Disability Studies
and Women with Disabilities; however, these SIGs are currently inactive.
Disability Studies in the Humanities
http://www.georgetown.edu/crossroads/interests/ds-hum
DS-HUM is intended to serve as a forum and bulletin-board for those interested
and involved in Disability Studies across the broad range of humanities scholarship,
not just American Studies. In addition to serving as a connecting point for
scholars, teachers and students in this field of study, this website contains
announcements, directories, bibliographies, syllabi and other relevant materials.
Graduate and Professional Students (GAP)
http://www.ahead.org/resources/siglist.html
The purpose of this AHEAD special interest group is to help bridge
the GAP experienced by many service providers and students with disabilities
in graduate and professional programs. The group's goal is to help answer
questions about identification, accommodations, licensure and certification
issues, transition issues and faculty awareness.
Modern Language Association, Committee on Disability Issues in the
Profession
http://www.mla.org/comm_disability/
Considers the needs and interests of scholars who have disabilities and
addresses a variety of related issues, including access to the convention
and scholarship in the field of Disability Studies.
National Communication Association, Disability Caucus
http://www.towson.edu/~bhalle/ncadis.html
NCA is a non-profit organization of researchers, educators, students, and
practitioners, whose academic interests span all forms of human communication.
The two goals behind the establishment of the NCA's Caucus on Disability Issues
are: (1) to promote greater participation by people with disabilities in
NCA and the discipline at large; (2) to encourage quality scholarship on
issues concerning disability and communication.
National Women’s Studies Association, Disability Caucus
http://www.nwsa.org/disc.htm
NWSA supports and promotes feminist/womanist teaching, learning,
research, and professional and community service at the pre-K through post-secondary
levels and serves as a locus of information about the inter-disciplinary field
of women's studies for those outside the profession. There are several
NWSA caucuses whose major goals involve representation of point(s) of view
currently recognized by NWSA, with one focusing on disability.
Society for Medical Anthropology, Disability Research Interest Group
http://www.medanthro.net/research/disability/index.html
The Society for Medical Anthropology supports several committees
and caucuses, which address the unique interests, and needs of its membership.
These Special Interest Groups offer linkages to scholars with shared Internet
concerns and sponsor informational newsletters, award competitions and projects.
The Disability Research Interest Group is still in the process of forming.
Listservs & Internet Mailing Lists
Anthropology and Disability Research
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AnthropologyDisabilityResearch/
Discussion group for the mutual engagement of anthropology and Disability
Studies.
Disability Culture Manifesto
http://www.dimenet.com/disculture/manifesto
Free e-newsletter on disability culture produced by Steve Brown at the
Institute on Disability Culture. To receive this newsletter, send the following
message to majordomo@tripil.com
: subscribe disculture
Disability-Research Discussion List
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies/discuss.htm
This is an international e-mail discussion list administered at the DRU
by Mark Priestley. The list (started in December 1994) is the largest of
its kind in the world, and provides a forum for discussion on all aspects
of disability research--both theoretical and practical. The list is intended
for all those interested in research as it affects disabled people both in
the UK and internationally. It provides a forum for the exchange of ideas,
information and news, particularly among researchers working within a social
model of disability. The list provides an opportunity for researchers, students
and disabled people to share their ideas, experiences and research findings.
It is also an excellent place to ask questions or seek information.
DS-HUM Listserv
http://www.mith2.umd.edu:8080/disc/resources/index.jsp#listserv
DS-HUM serves as a moderated forum for discussion and a bulletin
board for those interested and involved in Disability Studies across the broad
range of humanities scholarship.
DS-Teaching Discussion List
http://faculty.washington.edu/dlang/ds-teaching.html
DS-Teaching invites on-line conversation among people who
have any degree of involvement in teaching Disability Studies--teachers or
prospective teachers, students or prospective students, authors or artists
whose works are used in the class room, activist-scholars and activists who
are not involved in scholarship, and anyone else with a pedagogical interest
in the field.
GEOGABLE
http://courses.temple.edu/neighbor/service/
GEOGABLE is a discussion list for scholars in the humanities and
social sciences who are interested in geographical and built environment issues
as they relate to persons with disabilities and/or chronic illnesses. Although
GEOGABLE is the official discussion list of the Disability
Specialty Group (DSG) of the Association of American Geographers, membership
in the specialty group is not required for becoming a member of the
GEOGABLE list and contributing to our discussions. The GEOGABLE
list is being served by the Computing Center at the University of Kentucky,
and is moderated by Mike Dorn.
H-Disability
http://www2.h-net.msu.edu/~disabil/
H-Disability is a scholarly discussion group that explores the
multitude of historical issues surrounding the experience and phenomenon
of “disability.” H-Disability was established in response
to the growing academic interest and expanding scholarly literature on issues
of disability throughout the world. This group is a part of H-Net Humanities
& Social Sciences Online.
The Disability Archive UK
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies/archiveuk/index.html
The aim of the Disability Archive UK is to provide people
with disabilities, students and scholars with an interest in this and related
fields, access to the writings of those disability activists, writers and
allies whose work may no longer be easily accessible in the public domain.
It is hoped that the documents available via the Archive will help to inform
current and future debates on disability and related issues.
Disability History Museum
http://www.disabilitymuseum.org
This web site is a virtual home to a searchable, theme-based digital
collection of documents and images related to disability history in the United
States. The Disability History Museum's mission is to promote
understanding about the historical experiences of people with disabilities
by recovering, chronicling, and interpreting their stories.
Disability Social History Project
http://www.disabilityhistory.org/
This site looks at the role people with disabilities have played
in history, how they have been treated throughout time, and significant events
in the history of disability civil rights.
Disability Studies in the Humanities (DS-HUM)
http://www.georgetown.edu/crossroads/interests/ds-hum/dshowto.html
DS-HUM is intended to serve as a forum and bulletin-board
for those interested and involved in Disability Studies across the broad
range of humanities scholarship, not just American Studies. In addition to
serving as a connecting point for scholars, teachers and students in this
field of study, the listproc will have a homepage on the Crossroads website
containing announcements, directories, bibliographies, syllabi and other
relevant materials.
Disability Studies Web Ring
http://www.ringsurf.com/netring?ring=disstudies;action=addform
This web ring is intended to bring together web sites that contain scholarly
articles, essays, papers and/or other thought provoking information that would
be of interest to Disability Studies students and researchers.
DISC – A Disability Studies Academic Community
http://www.mith2.umd.edu:8080/disc/index.html
The DISC website is an international, interdisciplinary,
user-generated, digital forum providing support, collegial networks, and
information that sustains a Disability Studies academic community and promotes
Disability Studies in a humanities focus.
Institute on Disability Culture
http://www.dimenet.com/disculture
The mission of the Institute on Disability Culture is the promotion
of pride in the history, activities, and cultural identity of individuals
with disabilities throughout the world. The purpose of the web site is to
provide information about disability culture and to share examples of disability
culture.
The Museum of disABILITY History
http://www.people-inc.org/museum
The Museum of disABILITY History is dedicated to the collection,
preservation and display of artifacts pertaining to the history of people
with disabilities. Located in Buffalo, New York, and on the World Wide Web,
the museum offers educational exhibits and activities that expand community
awareness.
RESOURCES FOR TEACHING DISABILITY STUDIES
This section of this information package identifies books and articles
related to Disability Studies that can be used in courses in different academic
disciplines. Annotations of most of these readings can be found in the section
on Disability Studies Books, Chapters, and Articles
.
Anthropology
Groce, N. (1985). Everyone here spoke sign language: Hereditary deafness
on Martha's Vineyard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Ingstad, B., & Whyte, S. R. (Eds.). (1995). Disability and culture.
Berkeley: University of California Press.
Murphy, R. F. (1987). The body silent: An anthropologist embarks
on the most challenging journey of his life: Into the world of the disabled.
London and New York: W.W. Norton.
Arts, Humanities, and Literature
Bérubé, M. (1996). Life as we know it: A father,
family, and an exceptional child. New York: Vintage Books.
Brueggemann, B. J. (1999). Lend me your ear: Rhetorical constructions
of deafness. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Crutchfield, S. & Epstein, M. (Eds.). (2003). Points of contact:
Disability, art and culture [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability].
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Davis, L. J. (1995). Enforcing normalcy: Disability, deafness,
and the body. London & New York, NY: Verso.
Davis, L. J. (Ed.). (1997). The Disability Studies reader.
New York: Routledge.
Davis, L. J. (2002). Bending over backwards: Disability, dismodernism
& other difficult positions [Cultural Front]. New York: New York
University Press.
Fries, K. (1997). Body, remember. New York: Plume.
Hershey, L. (various dates). Poems and Tapes: On the
lawn , In the way, Dreams of a different woman
(these are books of poetry); The prostitutes of Nairobi,
You get proud by practicing (these are tapes of the author reading
her poems). Denver, CO: Author.
Kesey, K. (1962). One flew over the cuckoo’s nest.
New York: Signet.
Lubchenco, L. O., & Crocker, A. C. (1997). Bus girl: Poems by
Gretchen Josephson. Cambridge, MA: Brookline Books.
Snyder, S. L., Brueggemann, B. J., & Garland-Thomson, R. (Eds.). (2002).
Disability Studies: Enabling the humanities. New York:
The Modern Language Association of America.
Thomson, R. G. (1997). Extraordinary bodies: Figuring physical disability
in American culture and literature. New York: Columbia University
Press.
Thomson, R. G. (2001). Seeing the disabled: Visual rhetorics of disability
in popular photography. In P. K. Longmore & L. Umansky (Eds.), The
new disability history: American perspectives (pp. 335-374). New
York: New York University Press.
Communications/Media/Journalism
Couser, G. T. (1997). Recovering bodies: Illness, disability,
and life writing. Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.
Hockenberry, J. (1995). Moving violations: War zones, wheelchairs,
and declarations of independence. New York: Hyperion.
Shapiro, J. P. (1993). No pity: People with disabilities forging
a new civil rights movement. New York: Times Books.
Gender Studies
Clare, E. (1999). Exile & pride: Disability, queerness, and liberation.
Cambridge, MA: South End Press.
Deutsch, H., & Nussbaum, F. (Eds.). (2000). “Defects”:
Engendering the modern body [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability].
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Fawcett, B. (2000). Feminist perspectives on disability.
London: Pearson Education.
Fine, M., & Asch, A. (1988). Women with disabilities: Essays
in psychology, culture, and politics [Health, Society, and Policy
Series]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Garland-Thomson, R. (1994). Redrawing the boundaries of feminist Disability
Studies. Feminist Disability Studies, 20(3), 583-597.
Herndl, D. P. (1993). Invalid women: Figuring feminine illness in
American fiction and culture, 1840-1940. Chapel Hill, NC: University
of North Carolina Press.
Hillyer, B. (1993). Feminism and disability. Norman, OK:
University of Oklahoma Press.
Keith, L. (Ed.). (1994). Mustn't grumble: Writings by disabled
women. London: The Women's Press.
Keith, L. (Ed.). (1996). What happened to you? Writings by
disabled women. New York: The New Press.
Keith, L. (2001). Take up thy bed and walk: Death, disability and
cure in classic fiction for girls. New York, NY: Routledge.
Lloyd, M. (1992). Does she boil eggs? Towards a feminist model of
disability. Disability, Handicap & Society, 7(3),
207-221.
Lonsdale, S. (1990). Women and disability. New York:
St. Martin's Press.
Meekosha, H. (1998). Body battles: Bodies, gender, and disability.
In T. Shakespeare (Ed.), Disability studies reader: Social science perspectives
(pp. 163-180). London & New York, NY: Cassell.
Morris, J. (1993). Feminism and disability. Feminist Review, 43
, 57-70.
Morris, J. (1992). Personal and political: A feminist perspective
on researching physical disability. Disability, Handicap & Society,
7(2), 157-166.
Morris, J. (1998). Pride against prejudice: Transforming attitudes
to disabilities (Reprint ed.). North Pomfret, VT: Trafalgar Square.
Shakespeare, T., Gillespie-Sells, K., & Davies, D. (1996). The
sexual politics of disability: Untold desires. London: Cassell Publications.
Tremain, S. (Ed.). (1996). Pushing the limits: Disabled dykes produce
culture. London: Women’s Press.
Wendell, S. (1996). The rejected body: Feminist philosophical reflections
on disability. London and New York: Routledge.
Willmuth, M., & Holcomb, L. (1994). Women with disabilities:
Found voices. Binghamton, NY: The Haworth Press, Inc.
General Disability Studies
Albrecht, G. L., Seelman, K. D., & Bury, M. (Eds.). (2001). Handbook
of Disability Studies. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Barnes, C., & Mercer, G. (2003). Disability [Key Concepts].
Cambridge, United Kingdom: Polity Press.
Barnes, C., Oliver, M., & Barton, L. (2002). Disability Studies
today. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Bogdan, R. (1988). Freak show: Presenting human oddities for amusement
and profit. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Bogdan, R., & Biklen, D. (1977, March/April). Handicapism. Social
Policy, 7(4), 14-19.
Campbell, J., & Oliver, M. (1996). Disability politics: Understanding
our past, changing our future. London and New York: Routledge.
Charlton, J. I. (1998). Nothing about us without us: Disability oppression
and empowerment. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Corker, M. (1998). Disability discourse in a postmodern world. In
T. Shakespeare (Ed.), Disability studies reader: Social science perspectives
(pp. 221-233). London & New York, NY: Cassell.
Corker, M., & Shakespeare, T. (Eds.). (2002). Disability/postmodernity:
Embodying disability theory. New York: Continuum.
Davis, L. J. (Ed.). (1997). The Disability Studies reader.
New York: Routledge.
Davis, L. J. (2002). Bending over backwards: Disability, dismodernism
& other difficult positions [Cultural Front]. New York: New York
University Press.
Linton, S. (1998). Claiming disability: Knowledge and identity
[Cultural Front]. New York: New York University Press.
Linton, S. (1998). Disability studies/Not Disability Studies. Disability
& Society, 13(4), 525-540.
Nagler, M. (Ed.). (1993). Perspectives on disability (2nd
ed.). Palo Alto, CA: Health Markets Research.
Oliver, M. (1990). The politics of disablement. London:
The MacMillan Press.
Oliver, M. (1996). Understanding disability: From theory to practice.
New York: Palgrave.
Shakespeare, T. (Ed.). (1998). The disability reader: Social science
perspectives. London and New York: Cassell.
History
Baynton, D. C. (1996). Forbidden signs: American culture and the
campaign against sign language. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Bragg, L. (2001). Deaf world: A historical reader and primary
sourcebook. New York: New York University Press.
Burch, S. (2002). Signs of resistance: American Deaf cultural history,
1900 to 1942. New York: New York University Press.
Ferguson, P. (1994). Abandoned to their fate: Social policy and practice
toward severely retarded people in America, 1820-1920 [Health, Society,
and Policy Series]. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Groce, N. (1985). Everyone here spoke sign language: Hereditary deafness
on Martha's Vineyard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Lane, H. (1992). The mask of benevolence: Disabling the Deaf community.
New York: Vintage Books.
Longmore, P. K., & Umansky, L. (Eds.). (2001). The new disability
history: American perspectives [The History of Disability Series].
New York: New York University Press.
Matson, F. (1990). Walking alone and marching together: A history
of the organized blind movement in the United States, 1940-1990 (1st
ed.). Baltimore, MD: National Federation of the Blind. Also available in public
domain on the website of the National Federation of the Blind at:
http://www.nfb.org/books/books1/wamtc.htm
O'Brien, R. (2001). Crippled justice: The history of modern disability
policy in the workplace. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
O’Connor, E. (2000). Raw material: Producing pathology in Victorian
culture. Durham, NC: Duke University Press.
Pernick, M. S. (1996). The black stork: Eugenics and the death of
"defective" babies in American medicine and motion pictures since 1915.
Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, Inc.
Rothman, D. J. (1971). The discovery of the asylum: Social order
and disorder in the new republic. Boston: Little, Brown.
Scotch, R. K. (2001). From good will to civil rights: Transforming
federal disability policy (2nd ed.) [Health, Society, and Policy Series].
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Smith, J. D. (1985). Minds made feeble: The myth and legacy of the
Kallikaks. Austin, TX: PRO-ED.
Stiker, H. (1999). A history of disability (W. Sayers, Trans.)
[Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan
Press. (Original work published 1987).
Szasz, T. S. (1961). The myth of mental illness: Foundations of a
theory of personal conduct. New York: Delta and Szasz, T. S. (1970).
The manufacture of madness. New York: Delta.
Trent, J. W. (1994). Inventing the feeble mind: A history of mental
retardation in the United States [Medicine in Society]. Berkeley:
University of California Press.
Wolfensberger, W. (1975). The origin and nature of our institutional
models (Rev. ed.). Syracuse, NY: Human Policy Press.
Law and Public Policy
Barnartt, S., & Scotch, R. (2001). Disability protests: Contentious
politics, 1970-1999. Washington, DC: Gallaudet University Press.
Blatt, B., & Kaplan, F. (1974). Christmas in purgatory: A photographic
essay on mental retardation. Syracuse, NY: Human Policy Press.
Braddock, D. (Ed.). (2002). Disability at the dawn of the 21st Century
and the state of the states. Washington, DC: American Association
on Mental Retardation.
Campbell, J., & Oliver, M. (1996). Disability politics: Understanding
our past, changing our future. London and New York: Routledge.
Charlton, J. I. (1998). Nothing about us without us: Disability oppression
and empowerment. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press.
Ferguson, R. J. (2001, July). We know who we are: A history of the
blind in challenging educational and socially constructed policies--A study
in policy archeology [Critical Concerns in Blindness Series, No. 1].
San Francisco: Caddo Gap Press.
Johnson, M. (2003). Make them go away: Clint Eastwood, Christopher
Reeve & the case against disability rights. Louisville, KY: The
Advocado Press.
Krieger, L. H. (2003). Backlash against the ADA: Reinterpreting disability
rights [Corporealities: Discourses of Disability]. Ann Arbor, MI:
University of Michigan Press.
Longmore, P. K. (2003). Why I burned my book and other essays on
disability [American Subjects]. Philadelphia: Temple University
Press.
Minow, M. (1990). Making all the difference: Inclusion, exclusion,
and American law. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.
Pelka, F. (1997). The ABC-CLIO companion to the disability rights
movement. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, Inc.
Rothman, D. J., & Rothman, S. M. (1984). The Willowbrook wars:
A decade of struggle for social justice. New York: Harper & Row,
Publishers.
Russell, M. (1998). Beyond ramps: Disability at the end of the social
contract. Monroe, ME: Common Courage Press.
Scotch, R. K. (2001). From good will to civil rights: Transforming
federal disability policy (2nd ed.) [Health, Society, and Policy Series].
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Shapiro, J. P. (1993). No pity: People with disabilities forging
a new civil rights movement. New York: Times Books.
Philosophy/Religion/Theology
Eiesland, N. (1997). The disabled God: Toward a liberation theology
of disability. Nashville, TN: Abingdon Press.
Reinders, H. (2000). The future of the disabled in liberal society:
An ethical analysis. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.
Szasz, T. S. (1961). The myth of mental illness: Foundations of a
theory of personal conduct. New York: Delta and Szasz, T. S. (1970).
The manufacture of madness. New York: Delta.
Sociology2
Barnes, C., Mercer, G., & Shakespeare, T. (1999). Exploring
disability: A sociological introduction. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press.
Bogdan, R. (1988). Freak show: Presenting human oddities for amusement
and profit. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S. J. (1976). The judged, not the judges:
An insider’s view of mental retardation. American Psychologist,
31(1), 47-52.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S. J. (1989). Relationships with severely disabled
people: The social construction of humanness. Social Problems, 36
(2), 135-148.
Bogdan, R., & Taylor, S. J. (1994). The social meaning of mental
retardation: Two life stories. New York: Teachers College Press.
Dexter, L. A. (1960). On the politics and sociology of stupidity
in our society. Paper presented at the American Association
on Mental Deficiency. Reprinted in Mental Retardation
, 1994, 32(2), 152-55, with an introduction by Philip Ferguson.
Goffman, E. (1961). Asylums: Essays on the social situation
of mental patients and other inmates. Garden City: NY: Anchor
Books.
Goffman, E. (1963). Stigma: Notes on the management of
spoiled identity. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall.
Goode, D. (1994). A world without words: The social construction
of children born deaf and blind [Health, Society, and Policy Series].
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Linneman, D. R. (2001). Idiots: Stories about mindedness and mental
retardation. New York: Peter Lang.
Mercer, J. R. (1973). Labeling the mentally retarded: Clinical and
social system perspectives on mental retardation. Berkeley,
CA: University of California Press.
Nagler, M. (Ed.). (1993). Perspectives on disability (2nd
ed.). Palo Alto, CA: Health Markets Research.
Roth, J. A. (1963). Timetables: Structuring the passage of time in
hospital treatment and other careers. Indianapolis, IN: Bobbs-Merrill.
Schlesinger, L., & Taub, D.E. (Eds.). (2003). Instructional materials
for sociology and Disability Studies. Washington, DC: ASA Teaching
Resources Center.
Scott, R. A. (1969). The making of blind men: A study of adult socialization.
New York: Russell Sage Foundation.
Shakespeare, T. (Ed.). (1998). The disability reader: Social science
perspectives. London and New York: Cassell.
Trent, J. W. (1994). Inventing the feeble mind: A history of mental
retardation in the United States [Medicine in Society]. Berkeley:
University of California Press.
NOTES:
1Some of the programs in this listing were identified in an
article by Devva Kasnitz, Sharon Bonney, Raffi Aftandelian, and David Pfeiffer
in the Spring 2000 issue of Disability Studies Quarterly or
by Mike Dorn at Temple University in a private e-mail.
2 For course syllabi on teaching disability in sociology, see
Schlesinger, L., & Taub, D. E. (Eds.). (2003). Instructional materials
for sociology and Disability Studies. Washington, DC: ASA Teaching
Resources Center.
| Return to
CHP Home Page
| What's New
| CHP Projects
and Activities
| Publications
and Resources
|
| Links
to Other Disability Resources
| For More Information
|