Taking disability theory out of a Western context, Eunjung Kim questions the assumptions that treating disabilities with cure represents a universal good by examining the manifestations of violence that accompany medical and nonmedical cures in twentieth- and early twenty-first-century Korea.
Taking disability theory out of a Western context, Eunjung Kim questions the assumptions that treating disabilities with cure represents a universal good by examining the manifestations of violence that accompany medical and nonmedical cures in twentieth- and early twenty-first-century Korea.
Eunjung Kim is Assistant Professor of Women's and Gender Studies and Disability Studies at Syracuse University.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments vii Introduction. Folded Time and the Presence of Disability 1 1. Unmothering Disability 42 2. Cure by Proxy 81 3. Violence as a Way of Loving 122 4. Uninhabiting Family 166 5. Curing Virginity 197 Conclusion. How to Inhabit the Time Machine with Disability 323 Notes 235 Bibliography 269 Index 285
Acknowledgments vii Introduction. Folded Time and the Presence of Disability 1 1. Unmothering Disability 42 2. Cure by Proxy 81 3. Violence as a Way of Loving 122 4. Uninhabiting Family 166 5. Curing Virginity 197 Conclusion. How to Inhabit the Time Machine with Disability 323 Notes 235 Bibliography 269 Index 285
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