Description
Book SynopsisIn Encountering Ability, Scott DeShong considers how ability and its correlative, disability, come into existence. Besides being articulated as physical, social, aesthetic, political, and specifically human, ability signifies and is signified such that signification itself is always in question. Thus the language of ability and the ability of language constitute discourse that undermines foundations, including any foundation for discourse or ability. Drawing on Gilles Deleuze’s theory of primary differentiation and Emmanuel Levinas’s philosophy of ethical relationality, Encountering Ability finds implications of music, theology, and cursing in the signification of ability, and also examines various literary texts, including works by Amiri Baraka and Marguerite Duras.
Table of ContentsAcknowledgements Introduction: The Signification of Ability 1. Metaphysics of Ability: The Nature of Performance 2. On the Origin of (Human) Ability: Language, Possibility, and Ethics 3. The Nightmare of Health: Approaching Disability 4. Dis/ability in Black and White: The Relationality of Political Ability 5. Ability as Response and Irresponsibility: Dialogue and Struggle 6. Denatured Criticism: Ethics, Violence, Improvisation between Levinas and Baraka 7. Encountering Dis/ability in the Work of Marguerite Duras Notes Works Cited About the Author Index