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with the issues of
AUTISTIC IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION4 The autism acceptance movement emphasizes the need for change by educational institutions and society at large, while the medical model perspective seeks to understand cause and believes autistic people need treatment and even need to be cured of autism. This article uses a disability identity development model to explore the potentialimpact
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVEDISABILITY ANDSOCIETY JOURNAL
Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpretingphenomena from
NEURODIVERSITY, QUALITY OF LIFE, AND AUTISTIC ADULTS This article examines challenges to the quality of life experienced by autistic adults. The author, who is an autistic researcher, first shares how a neurodiversity perspective offers an important alternative to the deficit model of autism. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: DISABILITY AND HISTORY Introduction: Disability and History 1 Audra Jennings Guest Editor Ohio State University-Newark E-mail: jennings.160@osu.edu. In 2001, historian Douglas C. Baynton observed, "Disability is everywhere in history, once you begin looking for it, but conspicuously absent in the histories we write." 2 At the time, disability history certainly SUICIDISM: A NEW THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK TO CONCEPTUALIZE Anchored in queer and crip perspectives, this essay proposes the neologism "suicidism" as a new theoretical framework to conceptualize the oppressive system in which suicidal people experience forms of injustice and violence. REVIEW OF DEPOY AND GILSON, STUDYING DISABILITY: MULTIPLE The material covered in Studying Disability: Multiple Theories and Responses moves across a variety of fields in an attempt to build a synthetic theory which would allow for the creation of what the authors call "legitimate communities" (211). This synthesis spans social science, humanities, medicine, social work, entrepreneurial business and so on, with "explanatory legitimacy theory" being A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
TAMARA'S OPUS
Tamara's Opus Joshua Bennett Email: jbbennet@princeton.edu. Tamara has never listened. to hip-hop. Never danced. to the rhythm of raindrops. or fallen asleep to a chorus of chirping crickets. she has been Deaf. for as long as I have been alive. and ever since the day that I turnedfive.
DISABILITY STUDIES QUARTERLYHOMEABOUTLOGINREGISTERCURRENTARCHIVES Disability Studies Quarterly (DSQ) is the journal of the Society for Disability Studies (SDS).It is a multidisciplinary and international journal of interest to social scientists, scholars in the humanities, disability rights advocates, creative writers, and others concernedwith the issues of
AUTISTIC IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION4 The autism acceptance movement emphasizes the need for change by educational institutions and society at large, while the medical model perspective seeks to understand cause and believes autistic people need treatment and even need to be cured of autism. This article uses a disability identity development model to explore the potentialimpact
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVEDISABILITY ANDSOCIETY JOURNAL
Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpretingphenomena from
NEURODIVERSITY, QUALITY OF LIFE, AND AUTISTIC ADULTS This article examines challenges to the quality of life experienced by autistic adults. The author, who is an autistic researcher, first shares how a neurodiversity perspective offers an important alternative to the deficit model of autism. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: DISABILITY AND HISTORY Introduction: Disability and History 1 Audra Jennings Guest Editor Ohio State University-Newark E-mail: jennings.160@osu.edu. In 2001, historian Douglas C. Baynton observed, "Disability is everywhere in history, once you begin looking for it, but conspicuously absent in the histories we write." 2 At the time, disability history certainly SUICIDISM: A NEW THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK TO CONCEPTUALIZE Anchored in queer and crip perspectives, this essay proposes the neologism "suicidism" as a new theoretical framework to conceptualize the oppressive system in which suicidal people experience forms of injustice and violence. REVIEW OF DEPOY AND GILSON, STUDYING DISABILITY: MULTIPLE The material covered in Studying Disability: Multiple Theories and Responses moves across a variety of fields in an attempt to build a synthetic theory which would allow for the creation of what the authors call "legitimate communities" (211). This synthesis spans social science, humanities, medicine, social work, entrepreneurial business and so on, with "explanatory legitimacy theory" being A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
TAMARA'S OPUS
Tamara's Opus Joshua Bennett Email: jbbennet@princeton.edu. Tamara has never listened. to hip-hop. Never danced. to the rhythm of raindrops. or fallen asleep to a chorus of chirping crickets. she has been Deaf. for as long as I have been alive. and ever since the day that I turnedfive.
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVE Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpreting phenomena from the perspective of the person with a disability. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: ANTHROPOLOGY IN DISABILITY STUDIES Introduction: Anthropology in Disability Studies. Devva Kasnitz, Ph.D. Mary Switzer Fellow. Russell P. Shuttleworth, Ph.D. San Francisco State University. The ethnological approach to otherness, to difference, to not of us, as a topic of study is a uniquely compelling aspect of anthropology that makes it a natural discipline to engage in DEFINING DISABILITY: UNDERSTANDINGS OF AND ATTITUDES Disabled people, amidst political and social gains, continue to experience discrimination in multiple areas. Understanding how such discrimination, named here as ableism, operates is important and may require studying perspectives of people who do not claim a disability identity. Ableism may be expressed in a number of ways, and examining how a particular group, in this case siblings of REVIEW OF WONDROUSLY WOUNDED: THEOLOGY, DISABILITY, AND Wondrously Wounded by Brian Brock is a multi-layered Christian theological analysis of disability that critiques not only the stigma of disability in today's church but also the context of modern capitalist society which gives shape to this stigma—to the fearful or averted gaze upon the differences of those labeled disabled. Brock is an academic theologian who has studied medical ethics PHYSICAL DISABILITIES AND FOOD ACCESS AMONG LIMITED Introduction. Food is a basic need for all people. The degree to which people have access to food influences the quantity and quality of food choices they can make, and this has an impact on quality of life, health, and illness (Drewnowski & Specter, 2004; Eikenberry, 2003; Krebs-Smith & Kantor, 2001; Nord et al., 2003; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2000). A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES OF DISABILITY Abstract. This article contributes to the discourse on disability from an indigenous perspective, an area which has not been investigated in any detail. It explores the perceptions of disability and lived experiences of 18 indigenous individuals with impairments from Australia, Mexico and New Zealand. The findings from this researchsuggest
SIX WAYS OF LOOKING AT CRIP TIME Six Ways of Looking at Crip Time 1 Ellen Samuels. In this creative nonfiction essay, the author reflects on how 'crip time' has operated in their life, not only as a form of liberation, but also as a site of loss and alienation. When disabled folks talk about crip time, sometimes we just mean that we're late all the time—maybe because weneed
REASON AND NORMATIVE EMBODIMENT IN PLATO'S REPUBLIC: ON 4. Philosophical Arguments for Euthanasia and Infanticide in the Republic. Plato does not provide an explicit doctrine of physical and intellectual disability in the Republic, but the arguments presented concerning normative bodily form and intellectual ability lead directly to a rationally formed conception of disability in the bodily rejection of defective variants of human embodiment. DISABILITY STUDIES QUARTERLYHOMEABOUTLOGINREGISTERCURRENTARCHIVES Disability Studies Quarterly (DSQ) is the journal of the Society for Disability Studies (SDS).It is a multidisciplinary and international journal of interest to social scientists, scholars in the humanities, disability rights advocates, creative writers, and others concernedwith the issues of
AUTISTIC IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION4 The autism acceptance movement emphasizes the need for change by educational institutions and society at large, while the medical model perspective seeks to understand cause and believes autistic people need treatment and even need to be cured of autism. This article uses a disability identity development model to explore the potentialimpact
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVEDISABILITY ANDSOCIETY JOURNAL
Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpretingphenomena from
NEURODIVERSITY, QUALITY OF LIFE, AND AUTISTIC ADULTS This article examines challenges to the quality of life experienced by autistic adults. The author, who is an autistic researcher, first shares how a neurodiversity perspective offers an important alternative to the deficit model of autism. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: DISABILITY AND HISTORY Introduction: Disability and History 1 Audra Jennings Guest Editor Ohio State University-Newark E-mail: jennings.160@osu.edu. In 2001, historian Douglas C. Baynton observed, "Disability is everywhere in history, once you begin looking for it, but conspicuously absent in the histories we write." 2 At the time, disability history certainly SUICIDISM: A NEW THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK TO CONCEPTUALIZE Anchored in queer and crip perspectives, this essay proposes the neologism "suicidism" as a new theoretical framework to conceptualize the oppressive system in which suicidal people experience forms of injustice and violence. REVIEW OF DEPOY AND GILSON, STUDYING DISABILITY: MULTIPLE The material covered in Studying Disability: Multiple Theories and Responses moves across a variety of fields in an attempt to build a synthetic theory which would allow for the creation of what the authors call "legitimate communities" (211). This synthesis spans social science, humanities, medicine, social work, entrepreneurial business and so on, with "explanatory legitimacy theory" being A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
TAMARA'S OPUS
Tamara's Opus Joshua Bennett Email: jbbennet@princeton.edu. Tamara has never listened. to hip-hop. Never danced. to the rhythm of raindrops. or fallen asleep to a chorus of chirping crickets. she has been Deaf. for as long as I have been alive. and ever since the day that I turnedfive.
DISABILITY STUDIES QUARTERLYHOMEABOUTLOGINREGISTERCURRENTARCHIVES Disability Studies Quarterly (DSQ) is the journal of the Society for Disability Studies (SDS).It is a multidisciplinary and international journal of interest to social scientists, scholars in the humanities, disability rights advocates, creative writers, and others concernedwith the issues of
AUTISTIC IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT AND POSTSECONDARY EDUCATION4 The autism acceptance movement emphasizes the need for change by educational institutions and society at large, while the medical model perspective seeks to understand cause and believes autistic people need treatment and even need to be cured of autism. This article uses a disability identity development model to explore the potentialimpact
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVEDISABILITY ANDSOCIETY JOURNAL
Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpretingphenomena from
NEURODIVERSITY, QUALITY OF LIFE, AND AUTISTIC ADULTS This article examines challenges to the quality of life experienced by autistic adults. The author, who is an autistic researcher, first shares how a neurodiversity perspective offers an important alternative to the deficit model of autism. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: DISABILITY AND HISTORY Introduction: Disability and History 1 Audra Jennings Guest Editor Ohio State University-Newark E-mail: jennings.160@osu.edu. In 2001, historian Douglas C. Baynton observed, "Disability is everywhere in history, once you begin looking for it, but conspicuously absent in the histories we write." 2 At the time, disability history certainly SUICIDISM: A NEW THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK TO CONCEPTUALIZE Anchored in queer and crip perspectives, this essay proposes the neologism "suicidism" as a new theoretical framework to conceptualize the oppressive system in which suicidal people experience forms of injustice and violence. REVIEW OF DEPOY AND GILSON, STUDYING DISABILITY: MULTIPLE The material covered in Studying Disability: Multiple Theories and Responses moves across a variety of fields in an attempt to build a synthetic theory which would allow for the creation of what the authors call "legitimate communities" (211). This synthesis spans social science, humanities, medicine, social work, entrepreneurial business and so on, with "explanatory legitimacy theory" being A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
TAMARA'S OPUS
Tamara's Opus Joshua Bennett Email: jbbennet@princeton.edu. Tamara has never listened. to hip-hop. Never danced. to the rhythm of raindrops. or fallen asleep to a chorus of chirping crickets. she has been Deaf. for as long as I have been alive. and ever since the day that I turnedfive.
DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE DISABILITY PERSPECTIVE Still today there is an ongoing effort in the field of disability studies to refine the disability paradigm (Pfeiffer, 2001), but the broad outlines are agreed upon. As Bale (1988) pointed out some years ago, scholars in the field are interpreting or reinterpreting phenomena from the perspective of the person with a disability. WHAT IS DISABILITY CULTURE? Disability culture is a creation of new values. A disability culture movement (Brown, 1994), which takes pride in disability is emerging. Brown, co-founder of Disability Culture Institute, explains that disability culture is "to exclaim pride in the condition of disability" (1994: 10). INTRODUCTION: ANTHROPOLOGY IN DISABILITY STUDIES Introduction: Anthropology in Disability Studies. Devva Kasnitz, Ph.D. Mary Switzer Fellow. Russell P. Shuttleworth, Ph.D. San Francisco State University. The ethnological approach to otherness, to difference, to not of us, as a topic of study is a uniquely compelling aspect of anthropology that makes it a natural discipline to engage in DEFINING DISABILITY: UNDERSTANDINGS OF AND ATTITUDES Disabled people, amidst political and social gains, continue to experience discrimination in multiple areas. Understanding how such discrimination, named here as ableism, operates is important and may require studying perspectives of people who do not claim a disability identity. Ableism may be expressed in a number of ways, and examining how a particular group, in this case siblings of REVIEW OF WONDROUSLY WOUNDED: THEOLOGY, DISABILITY, AND Wondrously Wounded by Brian Brock is a multi-layered Christian theological analysis of disability that critiques not only the stigma of disability in today's church but also the context of modern capitalist society which gives shape to this stigma—to the fearful or averted gaze upon the differences of those labeled disabled. Brock is an academic theologian who has studied medical ethics PHYSICAL DISABILITIES AND FOOD ACCESS AMONG LIMITED Introduction. Food is a basic need for all people. The degree to which people have access to food influences the quantity and quality of food choices they can make, and this has an impact on quality of life, health, and illness (Drewnowski & Specter, 2004; Eikenberry, 2003; Krebs-Smith & Kantor, 2001; Nord et al., 2003; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2000). A WHOLESOME HORROR: THE STIGMAS OF LEPROSY IN 19TH CENTURY The village of Kalaupapa on Moloka'i is well known as the site of legally enforced exile for people in Hawaii with the disease of leprosy. Hawaii was the first nation in the world to institute such atreatment.
INDIGENOUS PERSPECTIVES OF DISABILITY Abstract. This article contributes to the discourse on disability from an indigenous perspective, an area which has not been investigated in any detail. It explores the perceptions of disability and lived experiences of 18 indigenous individuals with impairments from Australia, Mexico and New Zealand. The findings from this researchsuggest
SIX WAYS OF LOOKING AT CRIP TIME Six Ways of Looking at Crip Time 1 Ellen Samuels. In this creative nonfiction essay, the author reflects on how 'crip time' has operated in their life, not only as a form of liberation, but also as a site of loss and alienation. When disabled folks talk about crip time, sometimes we just mean that we're late all the time—maybe because weneed
REASON AND NORMATIVE EMBODIMENT IN PLATO'S REPUBLIC: ON 4. Philosophical Arguments for Euthanasia and Infanticide in the Republic. Plato does not provide an explicit doctrine of physical and intellectual disability in the Republic, but the arguments presented concerning normative bodily form and intellectual ability lead directly to a rationally formed conception of disability in the bodily rejection of defective variants of human embodiment.Journal Content
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Home > Vol 39, No 2 (2019) DISABILITY STUDIES QUARTERLY _Disability Studies Quarterly_ (_DSQ_) is the journal of the Society for Disability Studies (SDS) . It is a multidisciplinary and international journal of interest to social scientists, scholars in the humanities, disability rights advocates, creative writers, and others concerned with the issues of people with disabilities. It represents the full range of methods, epistemologies, perspectives, and content that the multidisciplinary field of disability studies embraces. _DSQ_ is committed to developing theoretical and practical knowledge about disability and to promoting the full and equal participation of persons with disabilities in society. (ISSN: 1041-5718; eISSN: 2159-8371) Note from the editors: As the Co-Editors of DSQ, we embrace the task of generating intellectual debate and meaningful conversation around peer reviewed scholarship in the interdisciplinary field of Disability Studies. DSQ is uniquely positioned to engage research and writing across disciplines. Disability Studies scholarship has a firm foundation in the liberal arts while also having practical application to the lived experience of disabled people. We also value strong and creative interventions in the applied fields, recognizing these fields as vital to Disability Studies.ANNOUNCEMENTS
DISABILITY STUDIES QUARTERLY IMPLEMENTS CREATIVE COMMONS Starting with Volume 36, Issue No. 4 (2016), _Disability Studies Quarterly_ will be published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives license (CC BY-NC-ND).Posted: 2016-10-06
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More Announcements... VOL 39, NO 2 (2019): SPRING 2019TABLE OF CONTENTS
PREFATORY MATTER
Editors' Introduction Brenda Jo Brueggemann, Elizabeth Brewer OlsonHTML
CRITICAL DISABILITY STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION Disability, the Politics of Maiming, and Higher Education inPalestine
Yasmin Snounu, Phil Smith, Joe BishopHTML
Enacting Equity in Higher Education through Critical Disability Studies: A Critical Community Self-Study Leyton Schnellert, Pamela Richardson, Earllene Roberts, Sara McDonald, Carolyn MacHardy, Assunta Rosal, Jewelles Smith, Matthew Rader, Jenica Frisque, Rachelle HoleHTML
REPRESENTATIONS OF DISABILITY IN FILM Mental Debility as the Superhero Trait of Today's Real Human in Alejandro González Iñárritu's BirdmanMaria Izquierdo
HTML
Joaquim Jordà and Núria Villazán's Mones com la Becky (1999) and the New Global Disability Documentary CinemaBenjamin Fraser
HTML
GLOBAL POLITICS
Chinese Special Needs Adoption, Demand, and the Global Politics ofDisability
Erin Raffety
HTML
Reconsidering Inclusion: Western theory and post-Soviet reality Fiona Hallett, David Allan, Graham HallettHTML
CHALLENGES TO NORMALCY Chronic Pain as Fluid, BDSM as ControlEmma Sheppard
HTML
"This is Not Normal": Ability, Gender, and Age in the Resistance toTrumpism
Byrd McDaniel, Paul M. RenfroHTML
Volume 1 through Volume 20, no. 3 of _Disability Studies Quarterly_ is archived on the Knowledge Bank site ; Volume 20, no. 4 through the present can be found on this site under Archives . Beginning with Volume 36, Issue No. 4 (2016), _Disability Studies Quarterly_ is published under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives licenseunless otherwise
indicated.
_Disability Studies Quarterly_ is published by The Ohio State University Libraries in partnership with the Society for Disability Studies.
If you encounter problems with the site or have comments to offer, including any access difficulty due to incompatibility with adaptive technology, please contact libkbhelp@lists.osu.edu. ISSN: 2159-8371 (Online); 1041-5718 (Print)Details
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