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Crip Genealogies

Contributor(s): Chen, Mel Y | Kafer, Alison | Kim, Eunjung | Minich, Julie Avril.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Durham : Duke University Press , 2023ISBN: 9781478023852; 9781478093725.Subject(s): SOCIAL SCIENCE / People with Disabilities | SOCIAL SCIENCE / Ethnic Studies / General | Disability studies | Critical pedagogy | Feminist criticism | People with disabilities -- Political activity | People with disabilities in literatureDDC classification: 362.4
Contents:
Foreword: When being reader #1 is awesome / Therí A. Pickens -- Introduction: Crip genealogies / Mel Y. Chen, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, and Julie Avril Minich -- Institutionalization, gender/sexuality oppression, and incarceration without walls in South Korea : toward a more radical politics of the deinstitutionalization movement / Tari Young-Jung Na and translated by Yoo-suk Kim -- Toward a feminist genealogy of US disability rights : mapping the discursive legacies and labor of Black liberation / Lezlie Frye -- Crip lineages, crip futures : a conversation by Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha / Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha -- Critical disability studies and the question of Palestine : toward decolonizing disability / Jasbir K. Puar -- Rhizophora : queering chemical kinship in the Agent Orange diaspora / Natalia Duong -- Disability beyond humans : Aurora Levins Morales and inclusive ontology / Suzanne Bost -- "My mother, my longest lover" : cripping South Texas in Noemi Martinez's South Texas experience zine project and South Texas experience: Love letters / Magda García -- Can I call my Kenyan education inclusive? / Faith Njahîra Wangarî -- Crip genealogies from the postsocialist East / Kateřina Kolářová -- The Black Panther Party's 504 activism as a genealogical precursor to disability justice today / Sami Schalk -- Model minority life, interrupted : Asian American illness memoirs / James Kyung-Jin Lee -- Filipina supercrip : on the crip poetics of colonial ablenationalism / Sony Coráñez Bolton -- Differential being and emergent agitation / Mel Y. Chen -- Afterwords: Crip genealogies in 800 words.
Summary: "The contributors to Crip Genealogies reorient the field of disability studies by centering the work of transnational feminism, queer of color critique, and trans scholarship and activism. They challenge the white, Western, and Northern rights-based genealogy of disability studies, showing how a single coherent narrative of the field is a mode of exclusion that relies on logics of whiteness and imperialism. The contributors examine how disability justice activists work in concert with other social justice projects, explore crip environments, create alternate disciplinary genealogies, and reject notions of the model minority. Throughout, they demonstrate how the mandate for a single genealogy of the discipline whitewashes disability and continues forms of violence. By cripping disability studies, the contributors allow for divergent histories, the coexistence of anti-ableist and antiracist theorizing, and a radically just and capacious understanding of disability. Contributors. Suzanne Bost, Mel Y. Chen, Sony Coráñez Bolton, Natalia Duong, Lezlie Frye, Magda García, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, Yoo-suk Kim, Kateřina Kolářová, James Kyung-Jin Lee, Stacey Park Milbern, Julie Avril Minich, Tari Young-Jung Na, Therí A. Pickens, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Jasbir K. Puar, Sami Schalk, Faith Njahîra Wangarî"--
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Item type Current location Call number Status Date due
Non Fiction Non Fiction BardBerlinLibrary
2nd floor
362.4 CHE 2023 (Browse shelf) Available

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Foreword: When being reader #1 is awesome / Therí A. Pickens -- Introduction: Crip genealogies / Mel Y. Chen, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, and Julie Avril Minich -- Institutionalization, gender/sexuality oppression, and incarceration without walls in South Korea : toward a more radical politics of the deinstitutionalization movement / Tari Young-Jung Na and translated by Yoo-suk Kim -- Toward a feminist genealogy of US disability rights : mapping the discursive legacies and labor of Black liberation / Lezlie Frye -- Crip lineages, crip futures : a conversation by Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha / Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha -- Critical disability studies and the question of Palestine : toward decolonizing disability / Jasbir K. Puar -- Rhizophora : queering chemical kinship in the Agent Orange diaspora / Natalia Duong -- Disability beyond humans : Aurora Levins Morales and inclusive ontology / Suzanne Bost -- "My mother, my longest lover" : cripping South Texas in Noemi Martinez's South Texas experience zine project and South Texas experience: Love letters / Magda García -- Can I call my Kenyan education inclusive? / Faith Njahîra Wangarî -- Crip genealogies from the postsocialist East / Kateřina Kolářová -- The Black Panther Party's 504 activism as a genealogical precursor to disability justice today / Sami Schalk -- Model minority life, interrupted : Asian American illness memoirs / James Kyung-Jin Lee -- Filipina supercrip : on the crip poetics of colonial ablenationalism / Sony Coráñez Bolton -- Differential being and emergent agitation / Mel Y. Chen -- Afterwords: Crip genealogies in 800 words.

"The contributors to Crip Genealogies reorient the field of disability studies by centering the work of transnational feminism, queer of color critique, and trans scholarship and activism. They challenge the white, Western, and Northern rights-based genealogy of disability studies, showing how a single coherent narrative of the field is a mode of exclusion that relies on logics of whiteness and imperialism. The contributors examine how disability justice activists work in concert with other social justice projects, explore crip environments, create alternate disciplinary genealogies, and reject notions of the model minority. Throughout, they demonstrate how the mandate for a single genealogy of the discipline whitewashes disability and continues forms of violence. By cripping disability studies, the contributors allow for divergent histories, the coexistence of anti-ableist and antiracist theorizing, and a radically just and capacious understanding of disability. Contributors. Suzanne Bost, Mel Y. Chen, Sony Coráñez Bolton, Natalia Duong, Lezlie Frye, Magda García, Alison Kafer, Eunjung Kim, Yoo-suk Kim, Kateřina Kolářová, James Kyung-Jin Lee, Stacey Park Milbern, Julie Avril Minich, Tari Young-Jung Na, Therí A. Pickens, Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha, Jasbir K. Puar, Sami Schalk, Faith Njahîra Wangarî"--

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