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Auteur
Katie Ellis is a Professor in Internet Studies and Director of the Centre for Culture and Technology at Curtin University.
Mike Kent is a Professor and Head of School for Media, Creative Arts and Social Enquiry at Curtin University, Australia.
Kim Cousins is a Research Assistant and Sessional Academic with the Centre for Culture and Technology and the School of Media, Creative Arts & Social Inquiry at Curtin University.
Texte du rabat
Critical disability studies both questions these existing notions of disability and interrogates how they have become a part of the academic attitude towards the field. As the first comprehensive handbook on critical disability studies, this volume provides an authoritative overview of the subject.
Résumé
Disability impacts everyone in some way. Approximately 10-20% of the world's population live with disability, and the associated issues affect not just these individuals but also their friends, family, and colleagues. When looking at it this way, it is strange that disability continues to be thought of as an anomalyeither as a medical problem located in a damaged body or something that exists exclusively outside the body, in a society that takes little account of non-normative bodies.
Critical disability studies both questions these existing notions of disability and interrogates how they have become a part of the academic attitude towards the field. As the first comprehensive handbook on critical disability studies, this volume provides an authoritative overview of the subject. Including 32 chapters written by established scholars and emerging, next-generation researchers it also includes contributions from activists, writers, and practitioners from the global north and the global south.
Divided into three parts: Representation, art, and culture; Media, technology, and communication; and Activism and the life course, it offers discussions on core critical disability studies topics including the social model, technology studies, trauma studies, representation, and queer theory, as well as ground-breaking work on emerging and cutting-edge areas such as neurodiversity and critical approaches in the Middle East, United States, Australia, and Europe.
It is required reading for all academics and students working in not just critical disability studies but sociology, digital accessibility and inclusion, health and social care, and social and public policy more broadly.
Contenu
1.Introduction. Part I Representation, Art and Culture. 2.Disability, intersectionality and decolonial perspectives from the Global South. 3.Pandemic art and the intersection of disability and trauma studies. 4.Neurodiversity paradigm in art. 5.Reinhabiting, reimagining, and recreating ableist spaces: Embodied criticality in art. 6.A case of the blues: Music, blindness, and citizenship. 7.Making the outsider centre-stage: A conversation on leadership opportunities for artists with disabilities in Australian theatre. 8.Queer, crip, and anti-colonial theories in popular culture: De/Constructing normativity in Disney's The Owl House. 9.Articulating the self: Disability rhetorics, autobiographical comics and the case of David Small's Stitches. 10.Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer: Not a supercrip. 11.Force of nature, forced by society: Rethinking Shakespeare's Richard III. 12.Precarity and the global dispossession of indigeneity through representations of disability. Part II Media, Technology and Communication. 13.Neurodiversity and the internet: Challenging the dominant autism narratives in Indonesia. 14.Centering disabled Americans' writings about the Covid-19 pandemic: A Critical Disability Studies analysis. 15.Indigenous sign languages in Australia. 16.A comparative study of Australia and Brazil: approaches to the UNCRPD and digital access. 17.Vision Australia's use of podcasts. 18.Transhuman liminalities and the othered body: Exploring disability and superheroes in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. 19.Redefining access in the smart city. 20.Disability and the Social Construction of Technology. 21.Take a selfie: Paralympic athletes on social media. 22.Disability's right to the Smart City: A manifesto for the emergent future. 23.Disability and digital public health communication: Gamification and accessibility. Part III - Activism and the Life Course. 24.Inclusion without access: Policing encounters with Deafness. 25.Disability and activism in Oman. 26.Invisible disability, Instagram, and health communications. 27.Singing from the same song-sheet: Harnessing the human rights framework through critical disability studies to achieve inclusive education. 28.Disability Critical Race Theory (DisCrit): Past, Present and Future an overview. 29.Liveable disabilities: Life courses and opportunity structures across time in Sweden. 30.Autocriticality and interdisciplinarity: Personal-professional applications of the tripartite model of disability. 31.Speculative Net Zero from the margins. 32.'Doing' disability research, ethically: A self-critique of a participatory disability research project.