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Borderlines in Private Law

Edited by: William Day, Julius Grower
Price: £90.00

Lord Denning: Life, Law and Legacy



  


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Dis/ability in Media, Law and History: Intersectional, Embodied AND Socially Constructed?


ISBN13: 9781032189765
Published: June 2022
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £130.00



Despatched in 5 to 7 days.

This book explores how being "disabled" originates in the physical world, social representations and rules, and historical power relations—the interplay of which render bodies "normal" or not.

Do parking signs that represent people in wheelchairs as self-propelling influence how we view dis/ability? How do wheelchair users understand their own bodies and an environment not built for them? By asking questions like these the authors reveal how normalization has informed people’s experiences of their bodies and their fight for substantive equality. Understanding these processes requires acknowledging the tension between social construction and embodiment as well as centering the intersection of dis/abilities with other identities, such as race, class, gender, sex orientation, citizen status, and so on.

Scholars and researchers will find that this book provides new avenues for thinking about dis/ability. A wider audience will find it accessible and informative.

Subjects:
Discrimination Law, Law and Society
Contents:
Chapter 1 - Introduction: Dis/abilities at the Intersections
Micky Lee, Frank Rudy Cooper, and Pat Reeve
Part I - Foundations: Experience and Theories
Chapter 2 - The Art of Regarding Still Life
Pam Mullins
Chapter 3 - Embodiment’s Contributions to Appreciating Life with Disability and to Advancing Justice
Mary Crossley
Part II - Rehabilitation, Disablement, and the State
Chapter 4 - Subjects of Industry: Craft Therapy, Its Photography, and Healing American Soldiers of World War 1
Jennifer Way
Chapter 5 - Medical Discourses on Dis/ability in State Socialist Romania: a Critical Genealogy
Radu-Harald Dinu
Chapter 6 - Embodied Inequalities: Intersections of Disabilities and Gender in West Germany (1950-1990)
Sebastian Schlund
Chapter 7 - Policing Dis/ability
Eric J. Miller
Part III - Representation, Liminality, and Resistance
Chapter 8 - Reassessing Japanese Radical Feminism from the Vantage Point of Dis/ability
Anna Vittinghoff
Chapter 9 - Sayōnara CP: the First Filmic Representation of the Japanese Disability Right Movement
Anne-Lise Mithout
Chapter 10 - Voltron: Legendary Defender and Compulsory Ablebodiness
Lauren Rouse
Chapter 11 - Corrective Lens: Dis/abilities and the Materiality of Media
Micky Lee
Part IV - The Political Embodiment of Personhood
Chapter 12 - Disability and Race in American History: Rhetoric and Reality in the Civil War and Post-Emancipation South
Jenifer Barclay
Chapter 13 - Bending the Laws of Nature: DNA Literacy and the Coding of the Perfect Human Being
Raphaela Tkotzyk and Kim Carina Hebben
Chapter 14 - Deconstructing Rules for Proof of Cognitive Impairments
Tom Lininger
Chapter 15 - So that playing to win is not playing to die: Constructing Legal Recourse for Athletes with Sickle Cell Trait Laboring in the Actor-Networks of the Brown Commons
Madeleine Plasencia