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Desiring Disability : Queer Theory Meets Disability Studies

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In multiple locations, activists and scholars are mapping the intersections of queer theory and disability studies, moving issues of embodiment and desire to the center of cultural and political analyses.

The two fields are premised on the idea that the categories of heterosexual/homosexual and able-bodied/disabled are historically and socially constructed.

Desiring Disability: Queer Theory Meets Disability Studies explores how the frameworks for queer theory and disability studies suggest new possibilities for one another, for other identity-based frameworks of activism and scholarship, and for cultural studies in general.Topics include the study of "crip theory" and queer/disabled performance artists; the historical emergence of normalcy and parallel notions of military fitness that require both the production and the containment of queerness and disability; breast cancer, which departs strikingly from heterosexual narratives; and butch identity, transgressive sexual practices, and rheumatoid arthritis.Contributors.

Sarah E. Chinn, Eli Clare, Naomi Finkelstein, Catherine Lord, Cris Mayo, Robert McRuer, Todd Ramlow, Jo Rendell, Ellen Samuels, Carrie Sandahl, David Serlin, Patrick White

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Product Details
Duke University Press
0822365510 / 9780822365518
Paperback / softback
25/02/2003
United States
English
330 p. : ill.
25 cm
research & professional Learn More
Issue of GLQ, v. 9, numbers 1-2, 2003.
Deals with the intersections of queer theory and disability studies, moving issues of embodiment and desire to the center of cultural and political analyses
Deals with the intersections of queer theory and disability studies, moving issues of embodiment and desire to the center of cultural and political analyses JFFG Disability: social aspects, JFSK Gay & Lesbian studies