"Disability Studies and the Environmental Humanities: Toward an Eco-crip Theory examines the intersections of disability studies and environmentalism, and represents one of the first substantial collections of essays that explore this emerging area of inquiry in a pointed, interdisciplinary, and intersectional manner."-Christine Junker, ISLE "Disability Studies and the Environmental Humanities charts an exciting and urgent new direction in scholarship for environmental literary critics and the environmental humanities more broadly."-Mary Foltz, The Years Work in English Studies The most significant disability studies anthology to emerge in years. It is extremely important that these particular branches of academic and political work rub against each other.-Susan M. Schweik, professor of English at the University of CaliforniaBerkeley and author of The Ugly Laws: Disability in Public Contributes to multiple fields, responding to growing curricular and scholarly interest in environmental humanities and disability studies. . . . This will be a foundational text in its own right.-Susan Burch, associate professor of American studies at Middlebury College and coeditor of At the Intersections: Deaf Meets Disability Studies