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Corporealities: Discourses of Disability

This series delves into the profound cultural and representational meanings of disability. It challenges traditional medicalized views of difference, instead analyzing how concepts like normalcy, health, and humanity are shaped by historical and social constructs. The books explore the shifting identities of disabled individuals, aiming to expand interpretive options for theorizing disability within the humanities. It is essential reading for understanding the social construction of divergence and the narratives surrounding bodily variations.

Disability Theory
Academic Ableism
Fictions of Affliction
A History of Disability
Disability in twentieth century German culture

Recommended Reading Order

  • Disability in Twentieth-Century German Culture covers the entire scope of Germany's most tragic and tumultuous century--from the Weimar Republic to the current administration--revealing how central the notion of disability is to modern German cultural history. By examining a wide range of literary and visual depictions of disability, Carol Poore explores the contradictions of a nation renowned for its social services programs yet notorious for its history of compulsory sterilization and eugenic dogma. This comprehensive volume focuses particular attention on the horrors of the Nazi era, when those with disabilities were considered "unworthy of life," but also investigates other previously overlooked topics including the exile community's response to disability, socialism and disability in East Germany, current bioethical debates, and the rise and gains of Germany's disability rights movement. Richly illustrated, wide-ranging, and accessible, Disability in Twentieth-Century German Culture gives all those interested in disability studies, German studies, visual culture, Nazi history, and bioethics the opportunity to explore controversial questions of individuality, normalcy, citizenship, and morality. Carol Poore is Professor of German Studies at Brown University. She is also author of The Bonds of Labor: German Journeys to the Working World, 1890-1990 and German-American Socialist Literature, 1865-1900

    Disability in twentieth century German culture
  • In addressing Western discourse on disability, Stiker examines the cultural assumption that equality/sameness/similarity is always desired by those in society and asserts his own view that difference is not only acceptable but desirable and necessary.

    A History of Disability
  • Reveals the cultural meanings and literary representations of disability in Victorian Britain. This book introduces readers to popular literary and dramatic works that explored culturally risky questions like 'can disabled men work?' and 'should disabled women have babies?'

    Fictions of Affliction
  • Academic Ableism

    • 254 pages
    • 9 hours of reading

    Brings together disability studies and institutional critique to recognise the ways that disability is composed in and by higher education, and rewrites the spaces, times, and economies of disability in higher education to place disability front and centre. For too long disability has been constructed as the antithesis of higher education, often positioned as a distraction, a problem to be solved.

    Academic Ableism
  • Since the 1970s the ascendancy of minority identities based on gender, race, and sexuality has transformed the landscape of cultural theory, embracing greater political urgency and relevance. This book provides evidence of the value and utility that a disability studies perspective can bring to these and other key questions.

    Disability Theory