Draft:The Routledge International Handbook of Critical Disability Studies
Appearance
Editor | Katie Ellis, Mike Kent, and Kim Cousins |
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Publisher | Routledge |
ISBN | 978-0-367-33857-2 |
The Routledge International Handbook of Critical Disability Studies is a 2024 textbook discussing critical disability studies, edited by Katie Ellis, Mike Kent, and Kim Cousins. The book is separated into _ parts: Representation, Art, and Culture (chapters 2-12), Media, Technology, and Communication (chapters 13-23), and Activism and the Life Course (chapters 24-32).
Contents
[edit]Introduction
[edit]- "Introduction" by Katie Ellis, Mike Kent, and Kim Cousins
Part 1: Representation, Art, and Culture
[edit]- "Disability, Intersectionality, and Decolonial Perspectives from the Global South" by Anna Hickey-Moody and Divya Garg
- "Pandemic Art and the Intersection of Disability and Trauma Studies" by Jennifer McKellar and Katie Ellis
- "Neurodiversity Paradigm in Art" by Jordan Alice Fyfe
- "Reinhabiting, Reimagining, and Recreating Ableist Spaces: Embodied Criticality in Art" by Bree Hadley, Eddie Paterson, and Janice Rieger
- "A Case of the Blues: Music, Blindness, and Citizenship" by Alex Lubet
- "Making The Outsider Centre-Stage: A Conversation on Leadership Opportunities For Artists With Disabilities In Australian Theatre" by Dan Graham and Suzanne Ingelbrecht
- "Queer, Crip, And Anti-Colonial Theories in Popular Culture: De/Constructing Normativity in Disney's The Owl House" by Chloe T. Rattray and Amy Shields Dobson
- "Articulating The Self: Disability Rhetorics, Autobiographical Comics, and the Case of David Small's Stitches" by Dale Jacobs and Jay Dolmage
- "Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer: Not A Supercrip" by Amber E. George
- "Force Of Nature, Forced by Society: Rethinking Shakespeare's Richard III" by Chloe T. Rattray and Suzanne Ingelbrecht
- "Precarity and the Global Dispossession of Indigeneity Through Representations of Disability" by David T. Mitchell
Part 2: Media, Technology, and Communication
[edit]- “Neurodiversity and the Internet: Challenging the Dominant Autism Narratives in Indonesia” by Hersinta
- “Centering Disabled Americans' Writings About the Covid-19 Pandemic: A Critical Disability Studies Analysis” by Emily Brooks and Beth Haller
- “Indigenous Sign Languages in Australia” by Cassandra Wright-Dole
- “A Comparative Study of Australia and Brazil: Approaches to The UNCRPD And Digital Access” by Matheus Ferreira
- “Vision Australia's Use of podcasts” by Saadia Ahmed
- “Transhuman Liminalities and The Othered Body: Exploring Disability and Superheroes in the Marvel Cinematic Universe” by Lorna Piatti-Farnell
- “Redefining Access in The Smart City” by Kathryn Locke
- “Disability and the Social Construction of Technology” by Kai-Ti Kao
- “Take A Selfie: Paralympic Athletes on Social Media” by Tatiane Hilgemberg
- “Disability's Right to The Smart City: A Manifesto for The Emergent Future” by Kuansong Victor Zhuang and Gerard Goggin
- “Disability And Digital Public Health Communication: Gamification and Accessibility” by Sian Tomkinson
Part 3: Activism and the Life Course
[edit]- “Inclusion Without Access: Policing Encounters with Deafness” by Elaine Cagulada and Tanya Titchkosky
- “Disability and Activism in Oman” by Najma Al Zidjaly
- “Invisible Disability, Instagram, And Health Communications” by Stephanie Mantilla, Jennifer Smith-Merry, and Gerard Goggin
- “Singing From the Same Song-Sheet: Harnessing the Human Rights Framework Through Critical Disability Studies to Achieve Inclusive Education” by Cátia Malaquias
- “Disability Critical Race Theory (DisCrit): Past, Present, And Future – An Overview” by Beth A. Ferri, David J. Connor, and Subini Ancy Annamma
- “Liveable Disabilities: Life Courses and Opportunity Structures Across Time in Sweden” by Lotta Vikström, Josefine Wälivaara, and Karin Ljuslinder
- “Autocriticality And Interdisciplinarity: Personal–Professional Applications of The Tripartite Model of Disability” by David Bolt
- “Speculative Net Zero from The Margins” by Philip Ely, Katie Ellis, Natarsha Bates, Nathon Webber, and Jordan Alice Fyfe
- “‘Doing’ Disability Research, Ethically: A Self-Critique of a Participatory Disability Research Project” by Tim Pitman
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