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El. knyga: Disability, Avoidance and the Academy: Challenging Resistance

Edited by (Liverpool Hope University, UK), Edited by (Liverpool Hope University, UK)

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Disability is a widespread phenomenon, indeed a potentially universal one as life expectancies rise. Within the academic world, it has relevance for all disciplines yet is often dismissed as a niche market or someone else’s domain. This collection explores how academic avoidance of disability studies and disability theory is indicative of social prejudice and highlights, conversely, how the academy can and does engage with disability studies.This innovative book brings together work in the humanities and the social sciences, and draws on the riches of cultural diversity to challenge institutional and disciplinary avoidance. Divided into three parts, the first looks at how educational institutions and systems implicitly uphold double standards, which can result in negative experiences for staff and students who are disabled. The second part explores how disability studies informs and improves a number of academic disciplines, from social work to performance arts. The final part shows how more diverse cultural engagement offers a way forward for the academy, demonstrating ways in which we can make more explicit the interdisciplinary significance of disability studies – and, by extension, disability theory, activism, experience, and culture. Disability, Avoidance and the Academy: Challenging Resistance will interest students and scholars of disability studies, education studies and cultural studies.
List of figures
vii
List of contributors
viii
Acknowledgement xi
Introduction: avoidance, the academy, and activism 1(8)
David Bolt
1 Disability, diversity, and diversion: normalization and avoidance in higher education
9(12)
David T. Mitchell
2 Disabling policies and exclusionary infrastructures: a critique of the AAUP report
21(12)
Sushil K. Oswal
3 `Crippled inside?' Metaphors of organisational learning difficulty
33(12)
Joel Petrie
4 Avoiding new literacies: ideology, dyslexia, and perceived deficits
45(12)
Owen Barden
5 School textbooks and the avoidance of disability: emptied of representation
57(11)
Alan Hodkinson
6 Lessons in critical avoidance: disability studies and `special educational needs'
68(11)
Claire Penketh
Laura Waite
7 Words for dignity: from Budapest to Berkeley and back
79(10)
Rita Hoffmann
Maria Flamich
8 Validating critical avoidance: professional social work, mental health service users/survivors, and the academy
89(10)
Kathy Boxall
Peter Beresford
9 Servicescapes, people, brands, and marketing management: looking to the future of consumer disability research through disability studies
99(13)
Tom Coogan
Robert Cluley
10 Literary disability studies in creative writing: a practical approach to theory
112(10)
Cath Nichols
11 Fabulous invalids together: why disability in mainstream theater matters
122(11)
Ann M. Fox
12 Ahimsa and the ethics of caring: Gandhi's spiritual experiments with truth via the idea of a vulnerable human body
133(10)
Hemachandran Karah
13 Disability studies and modern responses to Stefan Zweig's Beware of Pity: critics' avoidance
143(10)
Emmeline Burdett
14 Avoiding disability in Scottish literary studies? Scottish studies, ablenationalism, and beyond
153(11)
Arianna Introna
15 How I can go on: embracing modernity's displeasure with Beckett's Murphy
164(13)
Chris Ewart
16 Signifying Otherness in modernity: the subject of disability in The Sun Also Rises and The Sound and The Fury
177(11)
Will Kanyusik
Epilogue: the space of avoidance 188(4)
Claire Penketh
Index 192
Dr David Bolt is Associate Professor of Disability and Education at Liverpool Hope University, United Kingdom. He completed his PhD in 2004 at the University of Staffordshire. He has authored, edited, and guest edited numerous works about disability, literary representation, culture, language, and education.

Dr Claire Penketh is Principal lecturer in Disability and Education at Liverpool Hope University, United Kingdom. She completed her PhD in 2010 at Goldsmiths College, University of London. She has authored work on disability, art education, policy, and culture.