Description

Book Synopsis

Examines the rhetorical practices that generate and sustain discrimination against disabled people. Demonstrates how ableist values, knowledge, and ways of seeing pervade Western culture and influence social institutions such as law, sport, and religion.



Trade Review

“Cherney shows how the powerful but mostly invisible rhetoric of ableism shapes beliefs about disability. Carefully argued case studies—from The Exorcist, to the cochlear implant debate, to the Casey Martin controversy—illustrate how ableism operates through the warrants of ‘deviance is evil,’ ‘normal is natural,’ ‘body is able’ and across epistemic, ideological, and visual dimensions. They form the heart of the book, making it accessible and engaging for use in an undergraduate rhetoric or disability studies course.”

—Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson,coeditor of Embodied Rhetorics: Disability in Language and Culture


“As illustrated in this rich examination of ableism in Western society, ableism’s tendency to adapt to different time periods and zeitgeists while naturalizing itself through rhetorical repetition means that Cherney’s study heralds a new field of inquiry that takes ableism, geographical specificity, and rhetoric as its nexus.”

—Dominique Salas The Quarterly Journal of Speech



Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments

1. The Rhetorical Dimensions of Ableism

2. Fearing Disability and the Possession Narrative

3. Ableism and the Cochlear Implant Debate

4. Sport as Ableist Institution

5. A Rhetorical Model of Disability

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Ableist Rhetoric How We Know Value and See

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£67.96

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RRP £84.95 – you save £16.99 (20%)

Order before 4pm today for delivery by Sat 20 Dec 2025.

A Hardback by James L. Cherney

1 in stock


    View other formats and editions of Ableist Rhetoric How We Know Value and See by James L. Cherney

    Publisher: Pennsylvania State University Press
    Publication Date: 22/10/2019
    ISBN13: 9780271084688, 978-0271084688
    ISBN10: 0271084685

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    Examines the rhetorical practices that generate and sustain discrimination against disabled people. Demonstrates how ableist values, knowledge, and ways of seeing pervade Western culture and influence social institutions such as law, sport, and religion.



    Trade Review

    “Cherney shows how the powerful but mostly invisible rhetoric of ableism shapes beliefs about disability. Carefully argued case studies—from The Exorcist, to the cochlear implant debate, to the Casey Martin controversy—illustrate how ableism operates through the warrants of ‘deviance is evil,’ ‘normal is natural,’ ‘body is able’ and across epistemic, ideological, and visual dimensions. They form the heart of the book, making it accessible and engaging for use in an undergraduate rhetoric or disability studies course.”

    —Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson,coeditor of Embodied Rhetorics: Disability in Language and Culture


    “As illustrated in this rich examination of ableism in Western society, ableism’s tendency to adapt to different time periods and zeitgeists while naturalizing itself through rhetorical repetition means that Cherney’s study heralds a new field of inquiry that takes ableism, geographical specificity, and rhetoric as its nexus.”

    —Dominique Salas The Quarterly Journal of Speech



    Table of Contents

    Contents

    Acknowledgments

    1. The Rhetorical Dimensions of Ableism

    2. Fearing Disability and the Possession Narrative

    3. Ableism and the Cochlear Implant Debate

    4. Sport as Ableist Institution

    5. A Rhetorical Model of Disability

    Notes

    Bibliography

    Index

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