Defining the Boundaries of Disability
Critical Perspectives
Herausgeber: Carlson, Licia; Murray, Matthew C
Defining the Boundaries of Disability
Critical Perspectives
Herausgeber: Carlson, Licia; Murray, Matthew C
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This volume considers what it means to make claims of disability membership in view of the robust Disability Rights movement, rich areas of academic inquiry into disability, increased philosophical attention to disability, a vibrant disability culture and disability arts movement, and advances in biomedical science and technology.
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This volume considers what it means to make claims of disability membership in view of the robust Disability Rights movement, rich areas of academic inquiry into disability, increased philosophical attention to disability, a vibrant disability culture and disability arts movement, and advances in biomedical science and technology.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 144
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. September 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 9mm
- Gewicht: 231g
- ISBN-13: 9780367684167
- ISBN-10: 0367684160
- Artikelnr.: 65610410
- Verlag: CRC Press
- Seitenzahl: 144
- Erscheinungstermin: 26. September 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 9mm
- Gewicht: 231g
- ISBN-13: 9780367684167
- ISBN-10: 0367684160
- Artikelnr.: 65610410
Licia Carlson is Professor of Philosophy at Providence College, USA. She is the author of a book on philosophy and intellectual disability and has co-edited volumes on disability and moral philosophy, and phenomenology and the arts. She has published numerous articles and chapters in the philosophy of disability, bioethics, philosophy of music, and feminist philosophy. Her current research interests include the ethics of genetic testing, and the intersection of philosophy, music, and disability. Matthew C. Murray is the Senior Project Adviser for the Growthpolicy.org project at the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and serves as Visiting Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Providence College, USA. Matthew is actively researching and publishing in the areas of critical theories of justice and their effects on the ideas of and applications of distributive and social justice.
Introduction: What does it mean to claim "we are all disabled"? PART 1:
Theoretical considerations 1. Power, disability, and the academic
production of knowledge 2. Depending on the undependable: Disability,
fragility, and instability 3. The universal view of disability and its
danger to the civil rights model 4. On (not) deserving disadvantage: What
kind of difference does "disability" make? 5. Being and deafness: Examining
ontology and ethics within the dialectic of hearing-loss and deaf-gain and
deafness-and-disability PART 2: Spaces, representations, and lived
boundaries 6. Poems 7. "We are all disabled": Feathers, continuities, and a
neglected musical argument? 8. Robinson Crusoe and Peter the Wild Boy: What
Daniel Defoe inadvertently tells us about disability 9. "We are all
disabled": The conundrum of problems and solutions 10. Borderlands and
neurodiversity: Aren¿t we all humans? 11. We are all disabled, until we are
not 12. Thoughts on precarity, disablement, and risk during COVID-19 13.
Toward disability justice in a pandemic world
Theoretical considerations 1. Power, disability, and the academic
production of knowledge 2. Depending on the undependable: Disability,
fragility, and instability 3. The universal view of disability and its
danger to the civil rights model 4. On (not) deserving disadvantage: What
kind of difference does "disability" make? 5. Being and deafness: Examining
ontology and ethics within the dialectic of hearing-loss and deaf-gain and
deafness-and-disability PART 2: Spaces, representations, and lived
boundaries 6. Poems 7. "We are all disabled": Feathers, continuities, and a
neglected musical argument? 8. Robinson Crusoe and Peter the Wild Boy: What
Daniel Defoe inadvertently tells us about disability 9. "We are all
disabled": The conundrum of problems and solutions 10. Borderlands and
neurodiversity: Aren¿t we all humans? 11. We are all disabled, until we are
not 12. Thoughts on precarity, disablement, and risk during COVID-19 13.
Toward disability justice in a pandemic world
Introduction: What does it mean to claim "we are all disabled"? PART 1:
Theoretical considerations 1. Power, disability, and the academic
production of knowledge 2. Depending on the undependable: Disability,
fragility, and instability 3. The universal view of disability and its
danger to the civil rights model 4. On (not) deserving disadvantage: What
kind of difference does "disability" make? 5. Being and deafness: Examining
ontology and ethics within the dialectic of hearing-loss and deaf-gain and
deafness-and-disability PART 2: Spaces, representations, and lived
boundaries 6. Poems 7. "We are all disabled": Feathers, continuities, and a
neglected musical argument? 8. Robinson Crusoe and Peter the Wild Boy: What
Daniel Defoe inadvertently tells us about disability 9. "We are all
disabled": The conundrum of problems and solutions 10. Borderlands and
neurodiversity: Aren¿t we all humans? 11. We are all disabled, until we are
not 12. Thoughts on precarity, disablement, and risk during COVID-19 13.
Toward disability justice in a pandemic world
Theoretical considerations 1. Power, disability, and the academic
production of knowledge 2. Depending on the undependable: Disability,
fragility, and instability 3. The universal view of disability and its
danger to the civil rights model 4. On (not) deserving disadvantage: What
kind of difference does "disability" make? 5. Being and deafness: Examining
ontology and ethics within the dialectic of hearing-loss and deaf-gain and
deafness-and-disability PART 2: Spaces, representations, and lived
boundaries 6. Poems 7. "We are all disabled": Feathers, continuities, and a
neglected musical argument? 8. Robinson Crusoe and Peter the Wild Boy: What
Daniel Defoe inadvertently tells us about disability 9. "We are all
disabled": The conundrum of problems and solutions 10. Borderlands and
neurodiversity: Aren¿t we all humans? 11. We are all disabled, until we are
not 12. Thoughts on precarity, disablement, and risk during COVID-19 13.
Toward disability justice in a pandemic world