Description
Book SynopsisProvides an integration of feminist theory with disability studies
Trade Review"Puts feminist theory and disability studies into conversation with one another, not simply to make for an 'additive' approach, but to transform both fields of inquiry." —Diane Herndl, Iowa State University
"Hall's... collection is a fascinating and valuable contribution to our thinking, and comes at a crucial point in the consolidation of feminist bioethics' engagement with disability." —International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics
"Feminist Disability Studies is a particularly solid collection due to the wealth of cross-genre essays and contributions housed within its pages, and its contributors draw from women’s studies, literary and cultural studies, ethnic studies, philosophy, and many other disciplines." —Global Comment
"A volume of the highest scholarly quality that extends both feminist theory and disability studies." —Nancy Tuana, Pennsylvania State University
"Feminist disability Studies... should be required reading in any course that deals with [femiminsm and disability]." —Feminist Collections
"Each of the essays in this collection offers a valuable contribution in its own right. Read together, they make a strong case for the value, indeed necessity, of including disability perspectives in future feminist scholarship." —American Literary History
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments
Reimagining Disability and Gender through Feminist Disability Studies:
An Introduction / Kim Q. Hall
Part 1. Toward a Theoretical Framework for Feminist Disability Studies
1. Integrating Disability, Transforming Feminist Theory / Rosemarie Garland-Thomson
2. Critical Divides: Judith Butler's Body Theory and the Question of Disability / Ellen Samuels
Part 2. Refiguring Literature
3. Invisible Disability: Georgina Kleege's Sight Unseen / Susannah B. Mintz
4. Revisiting the Corpus of the Madwoman: Further Notes toward a Feminist Disability Studies Theory of Mental Illness / Elizabeth J. Donaldson
Part 3. Interrogating Fitness: Nation, Identity, and Citizenship
5. The Color of Violence: Reflecting on Gender, Race, and Disability in Wartime / Nirmala Erevelles
6. Gwendolyn Brooks, World War II, and the Politics of Rehabilitation / Jennifer C. James
7. Revising the Subject: Disability as "Third Dimension" in Clear Light of Day and You Have Come Back / Cindy LaCom
8. A Heritage of Ableist Rhetoric in American Feminism from the Eugenics Period / Sharon Lamp and W. Carol Cleigh
Part 4. Sexual Agency and Queer Feminist Futures
9. Disability, Sex Radicalism, and Political Agency / Abby Wilkerson
10. Debating Feminist Futures: Slippery Slopes, Cultural Anxiety, and the Case of the Deaf Lesbians / Alison Kafer
Part 5. Inclusions, Exclusions, and Transformations
11. Disparate but Disabled: Fat Embodiment and Disability Studies / April Herndon
12. Chronic Illness and Educational Equity: The Politics of Visibility / Karen Elizabeth Jung
13. Res(Crip)ting Feminist Theater through Disability Theater: Selections from the DisAbility Project / Ann M. Fox and Joan Lipkin
Contributors
Index