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Dis/ability in Media, Law and History

Intersectional, Embodied AND Socially Constructed?

Micky Lee Frank Rudy Cooper Patricia Reeve

$81.99

Paperback

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English
Routledge
29 January 2024
"This book explores how being ""disabled"" originates in the physical world, social representations and rules, and historical power relations—the interplay of which render bodies ""normal"" or not.

Do parking signs that represent people in wheelchairs as self-propelling influence how we view dis/ability? How do wheelchair users understand their own bodies and an environment not built for them? By asking questions like these the authors reveal how normalization has informed people’s experiences of their bodies and their fight for substantive equality. Understanding these processes requires acknowledging the tension between social construction and embodiment as well as centering the intersection of dis/abilities with other identities, such as race, class, gender, sex orientation, citizen status, and so on.

Scholars and researchers will find that this book provides new avenues for thinking about dis/ability. A wider audience will find it accessible and informative."

Edited by:   , ,
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
Weight:   453g
ISBN:   9781032189802
ISBN 10:   1032189800
Series:   Interdisciplinary Disability Studies
Pages:   248
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1.Introduction: Dis/abilities at the Intersections Micky Lee, Frank Rudy Cooper, and Pat Reeve. 2.The Art of Regarding Still Life Pam Mullins. 3.Embodiment’s Contributions to Appreciating Life with Disability and to Advancing Justice Mary Crossley. 4.Subjects of Industry: Craft Therapy, Its Photography, and Healing American Soldiers of World War 1 Jennifer Way. 5.Chapter 5 - Medical Discourses on Dis/ability in State Socialist Romania: a Critical Genealogy Radu-Harald Dinu. 6.Embodied Inequalities: Intersections of Disabilities and Gender in West Germany (1950-1990) Sebastian Schlund. 7.Policing Dis/ability Eric J. Miller. 8.Reassessing Japanese Radical Feminism from the Vantage Point of Dis/ability Anna Vittinghoff. 9.Sayōnara CP: the First Filmic Representation of the Japanese Disability Right Movement Anne-Lise Mithout. 10.Voltron: Legendary Defender and Compulsory Ablebodiness Lauren Rouse. 11.Corrective Lens: Dis/abilities and the Materiality of Media Micky Lee. 12.Disability and Race in American History: Rhetoric and Reality in the Civil War and Post-Emancipation South Jenifer Barclay. 13.Bending the Laws of Nature: DNA Literacy and the Coding of the Perfect Human Being Raphaela Tkotzyk and Kim Carina Hebben. 14.Deconstructing Rules for Proof of Cognitive Impairments Tom Lininger. 15.So that playing to win is not playing to die: Constructing Legal Recourse for Athletes with Sickle Cell Trait Laboring in the Actor-Networks of the Brown Commons Madeleine Plasencia.

Micky Lee is a Professor of Media Studies at Suffolk University, Boston. She has published in the areas of feminist political economy; information, technologies, and finance. Her latest books are Media Technologies for Work and Play in East Asia: Critical Perspectives on Japan and the Two Koreas (Bristol University Press, 2021; co-edited with Peichi Chung, Chinese University of Hong Kong), Information (Routledge, 2021), Alphabet: The Becoming of Google (Routledge, 2019), and Bubbles and Machines: Gender, Information, and Financial Crises (University of Westminster Press, 2019). Frank Rudy Cooper is William S. Boyd Professor of Law and Director of the Program on Race, Gender & Policing at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law. He is co-editor of Masculinities and Law: A Multidimensional Approach (with Ann C. McGinley, 2012). He has published 30 articles on racial profiling, cultural studies, policing, masculinities studies, and intersectionality theory in venues such as the Boston University Law Review, the University of California - Davis Law Review, the University of Illinois Law Review, and the Arizona State Law Journal. His most recent publication is Fight the Power!: Law and Policy Through Hip-hop Songs (Cambridge University Press, 2022) (co-edited with Gregory S. Parks). Patricia Reeve is an Associate Professor of U.S. History at Suffolk University. Her research focuses on 19th-century workers in the United States and their reimagining of citizenship as an embodied status in response to unprecedented and disabling industrial accidents. Currently, she is researching Suffolk County Coroners’ Inquests conducted from 1775 through 1860 which provide an important lens on Bostonians’ public lives, occupations, and health. Patricia also co-directs the annual American Studies Institute co-sponsored by the Graduate Program in American Studies at University of Massachusetts Boston and the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum.

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