EDEC 575: Critical
Disability Studies for Education
Introduction to
disability studies. Current issues in disability justice, with
emphasis on education, academic research, and technological
design. Introduction to social theories which centre disabled
standpoints: social model of disability, social construction of
disability, feminist disability theories, disability critical race
theory (DisCrit), queer crip theory, crip technoscience. Emphasis
on intersections between disability and race, gender, queerness,
class, and citizenship. Discussion of ableism, colonialism, and
climate change. Attention to teaching methods, research practices,
design practices, and activism/praxis with regard to disability
and its intersections. Introduction to universal design for
teaching/learning.
Time & location: Wednesdays 5:35pm - 8:25pm,
Education Building Room 113 (note room change!)
Instructor: Prof. Elizabeth Patitsas
Prerequisite: none
Credits: 3
Course Learning Goals
- To appreciate the
need for disability justice, and to critically engage with
disability issues
- To identify
disability justice issues in education
- To compare and
contrast different lenses from disability studies including
the social model of disability, feminist disability theory,
social constructionism, disability critical race theory
(DisCrit), and crip technoscience
- To critique social
institutions (e.g. schools, academia, science) using
appropriate theories relevant to disability justice
Communication
We'll be
using Slack for
our class discussion forum this term. (New to
Slack? Video
introduction here.)
Rather than emailing Elizabeth, post your question on
Slack or a direct message (DM) to Elizabeth on Slack.
Weekly Schedule
- Introduction
to Disability Studies
- Liberal
and Feminist Disability Studies
- Disability
and Education
- Disability
Critical Race Theory (DisCrit)
- Queer
Crip Theory
- Crip
Technoscience
- The Environment & the Climate
Crisis
- Colonialism
& Migration
- (Reading week)
- Cripping Art & Media
- (Canceled due to
Covid-19)
- (Canceled due to
Covid-19)
- Disabled Activism
- Intersex issues
Course Policies
Safe Space Statement:
We are committed to nurturing a space where students, teaching
assistants, lecturers, and professors can all engage in the
exchange of ideas and dialogue, without fear of being made to feel
unwelcome or unsafe on account of biological sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity or expression, race/ethnicity,
religion, linguistic and cultural background, age, physical or
mental ability, or any other aspect integral to one's personhood.
We therefore recognize our responsibility, both individual and
collective, to strive to establish and maintain an environment
wherein all interactions are based on empathy and mutual respect
for the person, acknowledging differences of perspectives,
free from judgment, censure, and/or stigma.
In keeping with the professional culture of teaching and learning,
the Faculty of Education community believes that our teaching and
learning spaces should model such professional environments. As a
community, we are committed to creating authentic opportunities
where understanding of teaching and learning is co-constructed
between instructors and students. In order for us to create
these learning environments, we are expected to demonstrate
awareness of, respect for and commitment to the behaviours and
actions of professionals. As members of the Faculty of Education
community, we are expected to be accountable to ourselves and
others and to be engaged, collegial and accessible. By doing so,
we are more fully able to share together in the types of critical
dialogue, creative thinking and reflective practice expected of
professionals.
Scent Free Environment:
This classroom and associated office hours are a scent
free environment. You must refrain from wearing perfume,
cologne and body spray in these spaces out of respect for people
with neurological & respiratory issues that may be affected by
these scents.
Academic Integrity:
McGill University values academic integrity. Therefore, all
students must understand the meaning and consequences of cheating,
plagiarism and other academic offenses under the Code of Student
Conduct and Disciplinary Procedures” (see www.mcgill.ca/students/srr/honest/
for more information).
Accommodations:
Students with disabilities who require accommodations should
discuss their needs with at least one of the instructor and/or the
Office for Students with Disabilities (https://www.mcgill.ca/osd/).
Students who are pregnant and/or caring for a dependent also often
may find it helpful to receive academic accommodations. McGill's
guidelines for accommodations for students who are pregnant and/or
caring for a dependent may be found at https://www.mcgill.ca/study/2018-2019/university_regulations_and_resources/graduate/gi_accommodation_pregnancy_caring_dependants
Missed Class Policy:
To make up a missed class without penalty, you must inform me
via DM on Slack with more than 24 hours notice that you
cannot attend the class in question. Missed worksheets should
then be completed at home and submitted at the start of the next
class.
I do not require doctor's notes for missed classes, because they
are a drain on the health care system (and sick students)! I
also want to explicitly note that I believe mental health is an
equally valid reason to miss a class. Other valid reasons for
missing class include: bereavement, personal crises, care for a
dependent, and presenting at an academic conference.
Snow Day Policy:
In the rare
event that McGill closes the campus for a snow day, we will
still have class at the usual time --- but online! I'll set up a
Google Hangouts or similar videoconference for class;
information will be posted on Slack.
Land Acknowledgment
This course takes place on land which has long
served as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous
peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations.
Want to help with decolonizing this land? Decolonizing
means returning the land to Indigenous groups. If you have the means, you can help decolonizing
efforts by donating to legal efforts to return land
back to Indigenous groups and/or protecting Indigenous lands.
Assessment
See Assessment.
Jan
8 - Week 1: Introduction to Disability Studies
Readings:
Note: this term I will be assigning a mix of academic and
non-academic readings. My aim is for weekly readings to take you
about 45-90 minutes to complete. The four readings this week are
all non-academic and each fairly short.
- Stella Young: I’m
not your inspiration (~10 min video, has captions)
- Introduces social
model of disability, inspiration porn, critique of how
education system deals with disability, disability community
- Center for
Disability Rights' Disability
Writing & Journalism Guidelines
- Resource on
language to use about disability; good/bad disability
organizations
- Introduces
ableism, disability community, intersectionality
- Harriet Tubman
Collective's open letter: The
Vision for Black Lives is Incomplete Without Disability
Solidarity
- Note: "audism" is
discrimination toward the Deaf community
- Introduction to
the issues at the intersection of race and disability
- Overview of some
of the ways that disabled people today continue to be
oppressed
- Rose Eveleth in
Wired: It's
Time to Rethink Who's Best Suited for Space Travel
- Introduces some of
the ways in which disability is advantageous
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #ThingsDisabledPeopleKnow
- spend some time perusing it!
Other things to do before our first class: set up Slack
and fill in the get-to-know-you questionnaire that is
pinned in the #worksheets channel (New to Slack? See
this video; you'll want to manage your notification
settings.)
Major concepts: social model of disability, affirmation
model, intersectionality
Learning goals:
- Compare and contrast
the medical, social, affirmation, pity and charity models of
disability
- List ways in which
disabled people are oppressed in today's society
- List ways in which
ableism and racism intersect
- List reasons for
which a disabled person may be proud to be disabled
- Give examples of
inspiration porn
- To critically
reflect on the presentation of disability in society
- Compare and contrast
disability rights and disability justice
- Give examples of how ableism is used to
perpetuate racism
In class:
Jan
15 - Week 2: Liberal and Feminist Disability Studies
Note: last class
before the add/drop deadline
Readings:
- 99% Invisible
podcast episode "Curb
Cuts" (~45mins, has transcript)
- Introduction to
the history of disability rights movement in the US; Ed
Roberts and the Rolling Quads
- Introduction to
curb cuts, universal design
- Does a good job
of exemplifying the liberal disability studies viewpoint
- Chapter 2, "The
Social Construction of Disability"; from Wendell, Susan. The
rejected body: Feminist philosophical reflections on
disability. Routledge, 2013.
- Introduces how
disability is socially constructed
- Discusses
intersections of disability and sex/gender
- Introduces
feminist disability studies
- Caroline
Criado-Perez: The
deadly truth about a world built for men - from stab vests
to car crashes
- Gives examples
of how technology is gendered
- Olga Khazan in The
Atlantic: When
Hearing Voices is a Good Thing
- Describes how
schizophrenia symptoms vary culturally - helps reinforce how
disability is socially constructed
- Also presents
people who are happy to have schizophrenia and don't see it
as a bad thing
- [Optional] If you have
not taken any courses on critical theory or social theory, I
recommend this trio of YouTube videos:
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #DoctorsAreDickheads
Major concepts: social construction of disability, feminist
disability studies, universal design
Learning goals:
- Give examples of
universal design
- Explain how
disability is socially constructed
- Define "crip time"
and explain why Wendell found "pace of life" worth of
discussion
- List ways in which
disability and gender/sex intersect
- Explain how
capitalism and the Industrial Revolution led to the
construction of disability
- Compare and contrast
liberal and feminist disability studies
- Discuss the overlaps in
the history of race/racism and disability/ableism
- Debate: is being a
woman a disability?
In class:
Jan
22 - Week 3: Disability and Education
Readings:
- Connor, D. J., &
Valle, J. W. (2015). A
socio-cultural reframing of science and dis/ability in
education: Past problems, current concerns, and future
possibilities. Cultural Studies of Science Education,
10(4), 1103-1122.
- Discusses how
science constructs disability rather than cures it
- Discusses why
disabled people may be distrustful of science (and
pseudo-science), such as due to the legacy of eugenics
- Critiques
existing science education and discusses some ways forward
(most of which are not unique to science education)
- Discusses
implications for education
- Notes universal
design for learning (UDL)
- Ferri, B. A., &
Connor, D. J. (2005). Tools
of exclusion: Race, disability, and (re) segregated
education. Teachers College Record, 107(3), 453-474.
- A history of
special education in the US, and how it to a major extent
was an antiblack response to Brown v Board in
order to keep schools racially segregated
- Two blog posts about
ABA "Therapy': I
abused children for a living (2017) and Invisible
Abuse: ABA and the things only autistic people can see
(2019)
- CW: abuse
- Explains how ABA
is state-sanctioned child abuse
- [Optional] Jennifer
Smith in the Chicago Tribune: The
Quiet Room
- CW: abuse
- Exposes the use of
forced seclusion in American schools
- [Optional]
Dixson, A. D., & Rousseau, C. K. (2014). And
we are still not saved: Critical race theory in education
ten years later. In Critical race theory in education
(pp. 45-68). Routledge.
- Introduces critical race theory, which we
will be talking about next week
- Critiques multicultural education with
respect to (anti-)racism --- we'll be returning to the
idea of multicultural education
- Introduces the concept of "interest
convergence", which will show up again in Hamraie's work
in a few weeks
- Gives some more context on Brown v
Board, this time from a critical race perspective
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #WhyDisabledPeopleDropOut
Major concepts: universal design for learning, interest
convergence, school-to-prison pipeline
Learning goals:
- Give examples of
universal design for learning
- Critique the
existence of so-called "special education"
- Discuss the history
of special education
- Critically reflect
on the legacy of eugenics
- List ways to make
education less ableist
- Explain why
pseudoscience is a disability justice issue
- Discuss parallels
between conversion therapy and ABA therapy
- Discuss the relationship
between disability and queerness
In class:
Jan
29 - Week 4: Disability Critical Race Theory (DisCrit)
Due in class:
Milestone 1 (topic selection)
Readings:
- Imani Barbarin in
Rewire: On
Being Black and ‘Disabled But Not Really’
- Discusses how
critical perspectives on disability too often ignore race
- Discusses how
"ableism is used to perpetuate racism" (Barbarin)
- Rebecca Bohenheimer
in ThoughtCo: What
is Critical Race Theory? Definition, Principles, and
Applications
- Introduces
critical race theory (CRT)
- If you've taken a
course on CRT feel free to skip this reading!
- Erevelles, N., &
Minear, A. (2010). Unspeakable
offenses: Untangling race and disability in discourses of
intersectionality. Journal of Literary & Cultural
Disability Studies, 4(2), 127-145.
- CW: abuse
- Discusses types of
intersectionality
- Motivates the need
for examining the intersection of race and disability
- Illustrates how
medical diagnoses are impermanent
- Annamma, S. A.,
Ferri, B. A., & Connor, D. J. (2018). Disability
critical race theory: Exploring the intersectional lineage,
emergence, and potential futures of DisCrit in education.
Review of Research in Education, 42(1), 46-71.
- Introduces DisCrit
and its tenets, with a focus on application to education
- Table 1 provides a
ton of examples of DisCrit being applied to various themes
(e.g. eugenics, school-to-prison pipeline) which should be
useful for helping you find literature for your final
project
- [Optional] Lalvani,
P., & Broderick, A. A. (2013). Institutionalized ableism
and the misguided “Disability Awareness Day”: Transformative
pedagogies for teacher education. Equity & Excellence in
Education, 46(4), 468-483.
- Critiques the
“multicultural education” style approach to teaching about
disability
- Critiques how
social justice education neglects disability justice
- Critiques the idea
of disability simulations
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #DisabilityTooWhite
Major concepts: social construction of race, critical race
theory, DisCrit
Learning goals:
- Critique liberal
disability studies with regard to racism
- Explain why many
black disabled people downplay or hide their disabilities
- Explain what
critical race theory is and its major criticisms of
liberalism/multiculturalism
- List different types
of intersectional analysis per Erevelles & Minear
- Discuss the role of
race in the social construction of disability
- Explain what
disability critical race theory (DisCrit) is and list its core
tenets
- Compare and
contrast: liberal disability studies, feminist disability
studies, DisCrit
- Debate: are disability
simulations worth doing in the classroom?
In class:
Feb
5 - Week 5: Crip Theory
Note: last class
before the withdrawal deadline
Due in class: Revised Milestone 1 (topic
selection)
Readings:
- Kelsey Foreman on
Youtube: What
is Queer Theory? (~10 mins, has captions)
- Introduces queer
theory, what it means to queer
- Gender
performativity theory
- Jenna Reid in
Canadian Art: Cripping
the Arts: It's About Time
- Asks "what does it
mean to crip the arts?"
- Then crips the
Canadian art community, critiquing how access &
inclusion is not enough, etc
- Schalk, S. (2013). Coming
to claim crip: Disidentification with/in disability studies.
Disability Studies Quarterly, 33(2).
- Introduces
crip(ping), crip theory
- Discusses
relationship between disability, cripness, and fatness
- Discusses the
"Oppression Olympics"
- Discusses
inter-group (dis)identification
- Discusses how
gender, race, fatness, etc reflect bodyminds which misfit
in society
- [Optional] Evans, H.
D. (2017). Un/covering:
Making disability identity legible. Disability Studies
Quarterly, 37(1).
- Discusses how
disability is "emasculating" in a society where independence
is tied to performing masculinity
- Discussion of
"coming out" as having an invisible disability
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #StopTheShock
Major concepts: crip, performativity, passing/uncovering
Learning goals
- Explain what it
means to "queer"
- Debate: is
disability performed?
- Explain what it
means to "crip"
- Compare and
contrast: liberal disability studies, feminist disability
studies, DisCrit, queer crip theory
- Debate: is race a
disability? Fatness?
- Identify ways in which
eugenics lives on today
- Analyse how
disability changes/affects gender performance
In class:
Feb
12 - Week 6: Crip Technoscience
Readings:
- s.e. smith in Vox: Disabled
people don't need so many fancy new gadgets. We just need
more ramps.
- Defines
"disability dongle" and gives examples
- Critiques
disability-focused techno-saviourism
- Ch
4: Sloped Technoscience in Hamraie, A. (2017). Building
access: Universal design and the politics of disability. U of
Minnesota Press.
- Critiques
universal design and liberal ideas of accessibility
- Explains
"friction" as a design concept
- Discusses
disability maker cultures
- Mentions
interest convergence, which is a concept from critical
race theory
- Hamraie, Aimi, and
Kelly Fritsch. "Crip
technoscience manifesto." Catalyst: Feminism, Theory,
Technoscience 5, no. 1 (2019).
- Introduces crip
technoscience and differentiates it from disability
technoscience
- Discusses
relationship between disabled people and
technology/science
- Discussion of
VOCs and disability foreshadows our week on climate change
- [Optional] Jillian
Weise in Granta: Common
Cyborg
- Discusses how
feminist theory neglects and erases disability
- Explores the
"cyborg" concept from a disabled feminist standpoint
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #AccessIsLove
Major concepts: crip technoscience, disability dongle,
cyborg
Learning goals
- Compare and contrast
universal design and "disability dongles"
- Discuss the benefits
and drawbacks of friction in design
- List the core tenets
of crip technoscience
- List ways in which
disabled people are makers and knowers
- Discuss the
relationship between disability and technology
- Compare and
contrast: liberal disability studies, feminist disability
studies, DisCrit, queer crip theory, crip technoscience
- Compare and
contrast: crip technoscience, disability technoscience, and
cyborg feminism
In class:
Feb
19 - Week 7: The Environment and the Climate Crisis
Due in class: Milestone 2 (theory
selection)
Readings:
- Belser, J. W.
(2015). Disaster
and Disability: Social Inequality and the Uneven Effects of
Climate Change. Tikkun, 30(2), 24-25.
- Discusses how
"natural" disasters disproportionately affect disabled
people, and how climate change will make these disasters
more frequent and severe
- Discusses what
climate activists can learn from the disability community
(e.g. interdependence, vulnerability)
- Two chapters from
Disability Studies and the Environmental Humanities: Toward an
Eco-Crip Theory, 422.
- Saigon Flowr in The
Establishment: Strawgate:
The Ableism Behind Exclusionary Activism
- Explains why straw
bans are ableist
- Also discusses how
straw bans are a smokescreen from meaningful climate
activism
- Imani Barbarin in
Forbes: Climate
Darwinism Makes Disabled People Expendable
- Introduces the
concept of climate Darwinism
Major concepts:
environmental racism, climate justice
Twitter hashtag of the week: #SuckItAbleism
Learning goals:
- List ways in which
climate change will disproportionately affect disabled people
- Discuss the
intersections of race, disability and climate change
- List ways disabled
standpoints can contribute to fighting climate change
- Critique existing
environmental movements with regard to ableism
- Apply different
theories from this course (crip theory, crip technoscience,
feminist DS, DisCrit) to the issue of climate change
In class:
Feb
26 - Week 8: Colonialism and Migration
Due in class:
Revised Milestone 2
Readings:
- Kim
Sauder’s blog post on how Canada
denies immigration to people with disabilities
- Addresses
how most people seem to have no idea that it’s common for
countries to deny immigration applications on the basis of
disability, and that Canada does this
- Explains
why it's not feasible for Americans with chronic illness
to not "just move to Canada"
- Note:
not just a Canada thing. Australia, New Zealand, formerly
the US (and maybe again soon), etc.
- Carlos Oen in The
Tyee: Discovering
the Secrets Behind Indigenous Hand Talkers
- Notes that there
is a long history of Indigenous sign languages which predate
colonialization
- Notes how sign
language is functional in ways spoken language is not
- Ross Perlin in The Guardian: The
Race to Save a Dying Language.
- Discusses
the effects of globalization on Indigenous sign languages
- Meekosha,
H. (2011). Decolonising
disability: Thinking and acting globally. Disability
& Society, 26(6), 667-682.
- Critiques
disability studies for its centring of Global Northern
assumptions and values
- Carefully
discusses how colonialism creates impairments
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #DisHist
Learning goals:
- Explore issues
facing Deaf Indigenous people
- Discuss how
disability issues vary in the Global South
- Critique disability
studies for its colonialism
- List countries in
which migration has been restricted in ableist ways
- Discuss the
intersections of ableism and settler colonialism
- Discuss how climate
change will affect disabled people with regard to climate
change induced migration
In class:
Mar 5 - Week 9:
Reading Week --- No Class!
Mar
11 - Week 10: Cripping Art and Media
Due in class: Milestone 3
Readings:
- The Princess and the
Scrivener on Youtube: The
Wonder of Miscasting: The Misrepresentaton of Disfigurement
and Disability (~10 mins, has captions)
- Critiques
casting abled actors into disabled & disfigured roles
- Critiques media
representations of disability
- Annie Elainey on
Youtube: Why
is Disability Representation So White? (~5 min, has
captions)
- Critiques media
representations of disability for erasing disabled POC
- Jennifer Brea's
documentary "Unrest"
(1h38m, has captions)
- Example of
disability being told by a disabled perspective (notably,
from a multiracial woman)
- Illustrates how
women (especially black women) are not taken seriously by
the medical establishment
- Shows how
disabled people form community online
- Shows how
disabled people can have their children taken away from
them just because of their disabilit(y/ies)
- [Optional] ASAN’s
2019 Anti-Filicide
Toolkit pages 1-9
- Explains what
filicide is
- Critiques media
representations of filicide
- Illustrates how
media focuses on abled parents instead of PWD
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #DisTheOscars
In class:
Learning goals:
- Critique media
representations of disability in Western society
- List examples of art
and artistic movements by disabled people
- Apply theories from
this course (e.g. crip theory, DisCrit) to multiple works of
art/media
- Discuss ways to make
art & literature education more inclusive to disabled
students and educators
In class:
Mar
18 - Week 11: Canceled due to Pandemic
This class has been canceled due to the Covid-19
pandemic and will be postponed to when classes resume.
Since we are
missing out on two student-responsive lectures, I am giving
some optional readings for topics you voted as interested:
Optional Readings
Based on Votes from Week 10
Mar 26 - Week 12:
Canceled due to Pandemic
This class has been
canceled due to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Given
the likelihood of boredom during the two-week shutdown,
I've given a bunch more optional readings to go with the
Week 14 readings. If you're bored, I suggest reading
ahead! :)
Apr
4 - Week 13: Disability Activism
Due in class: Milestone 4 (draft of term paper)
Readings:
- Disability
Visibility podcast episode 24: Disability
Justice and Community Organizing (~30 mins, has
transcript)
- Explains what
disability justice is
- The interviewee
gives a great illustration of how she as a disabled person
realized that the oppression she was facing was systemic
rather than “these are just the things I have to deal
with”
- Discusses
differences between Canada and the US in terms of
disability rights
- Discussion of
state of disability justice activism in Canada (mostly
focusing on Ontario)
- Kate Ringland on
Medium: The
Problem of Social Media Versus the "Real World"
- Critiques the
idea that online life is not the "real world" and how this
dichotomy is ableist
- Contra* podcast
episode 8: Contra*Hashtag
with Moya Bailey and Vilissa Thompson (~1h, has
transcript)
- Discusses
disabled hashtag activism, particularly by black disabled
women
- Discusses
citation pratices as political and twitter as a site of
scholarship
- CCPA article on “Updates
from the long road to deinstitutionalization”
- Makes clear
institutionalization is still ongoing in Canada
- Doesn’t pull any
punches about how progressive circles ignore the needs of
people with intellectual disabilities
- Lots and lots of
stats on how people with intellectual disabilities
experience higher rates of violence, sexual assault,
homelessness
- Explains what
sheltered workshops are
Twitter hashtag of
the week: #CripTheVote
Learning goals:
- Compare and contrast
the state of disability activism in Canada and the US
- Critique the notion
that online activism is not "real"
- List effects of
hashtag activism
- List current issues
for disabled activism in Canada
In class (which is on
Zoom, see Slack for details)
Apr
11 - Week 14: Intersex Issues
Due in
class: Revised Milestone 4 (draft of term paper)
Readings:
- Intersex Human
Rights Australia:
- Media and style guide
- Intersex
and intersectionality
- These articles
introduce
what
intersex is, language used, issues facing
intersex people, and how the intersect
with disability &
queerness
- Radiolab Presents Gonads:
Dutee. (~35 mins, has transcript)
- Gives a history of sex/gender in sports, and rich
description of an experience of
being intersex
- Makes clear how
sex is far more
complicated than
chromosomes or genitals
- Introduces how
race plays a role
through the selective
testing of women athletes
of colour
- Optional
accompaniments
to this
podcast:
- The
Gonads episode
on X
&
Y (~30 mins, has
transcript)
- This Vox
video (~12 mins, has
captions) has more recent
updates, but also
uses the
contentious
term "DSD"
- Koyama, E. (2006). From
‘Intersex’to ‘DSD’: Toward a queer disability politics of
gender. Intersex Initiative
- Ingid Kesa in Vice:
The
Female Unibrow is Back
- Examples of how
femininity and the boundary between "beauty" and "bearded
lady" have always been socially constructed
- Optional: Disability Visibilty
podcast episode 39: Sex
Education (~30 mins, has transcript)
- Discusses (the
lack of) sex education for disabled people and its
cisheteronormativity
- Body autonomy
Learning
goals:
- Explore how the
medical model of disability affects more than disabilities
- Explore the
relationship between compulsory ablebodiedness and patriarchy
- Discuss the
relationships between intersex, disability, and race
- Discuss the
relationships between intersex, disability, and beauty
- Debate: are intersex
people crips? Queer?
In class:
I want to learn more!
Yay! :D
Here are some ways to stay in tune with disability topics after
the term ends, or to do additional readings during the term!
- Podcasts to
subscribe to:
- Lists of people to
follow on twitter
- Youtubers to
subscribe to:
- Blogs to follow:
- Journals to follow:
Some readings that I considered assigning but didn't due to time
constraints:
- Kim Sauder's twitter
thead on parental
abuse of disabled children
- CL Lynch in The
Aspergian: "It's
a Spectrum" Doesn't Mean What You Think
- Explains the
difference between spectrum and gradient
- Addresses
misconception that ASD means a gradient from "high
functioning" to "low functioning"
- Bennett, Cynthia L.,
and Daniela K. Rosner. "The
Promise of Empathy: Design, Disability, and Knowing the
Other." In Proceedings of the 2019 CHI Conference on
Human Factors in Computing Systems, p. 298. ACM, 2019.
- Discusses how
“empathy” actually others disabled people
- Gernsbacher,
Morton Ann, Adam R. Raimond, M. Theresa Balinghasay, and
Jilana S. Boston. "“Special needs” is an
ineffective euphemism." Cognitive research: principles
and implications 1, no. 1 (2016): 29.
- Provides
ammunition for why people need to stop using the term
"special needs"
- Excerpts, such as
the introduction, from Dolmage's book "Academic
Ableism"
- Sekerci and
Altiraifi in Al Jazeera English: A
US immigration history of white supremacy and ableism
- Discusses
ableism and white supremacy in US immigration law
- Vilissa Thompson in
Rewire: The
Overlooked History of Black Disabled People
- This Bodies podcast
episode on how black
women are 4x more likely to have fibroids:
- Illustrates how
race, gender & disability intersect
- Illustrates how
fibroids are disabling
- Emily K Michael on
Medium: Remaking
the Ideal Teacher
- Shares experience
of teaching as a disabled educator
- Kirsten Schultz's
twitter thread: Why
#DeleteFacebook hurts people with disabilities
Discusses how social media is used by PWD
- The chapter from No
Pity by Joseph Shapiro on the Gallaudet protests or the one on
the Sec 504 protests
- So much good stuff
on Villissa Thompson's Disabled
Black Woman Syllabus (sadly subject to a bunch of
linkrot)
- Jampel, C. (2018). Intersections
of disability justice, racial justice and environmental
justice. Environmental Sociology, 4(1), 122-135.
- Twitter hashtags:
#AbledsAreWeird, #ShitAbledPeopleSay, #AbleismExists,
#HealthcareWhileColored, #HowToPissOffDisabledPeople,
#WhyICallMyselfDisabled, #WhenIWasADisabledKid