Language:
English
繁體中文
Help
回圖書館
Login
Back
Switch To:
Labeled
|
MARC Mode
|
ISBD
Dangerous discourses of disability, ...
~
Shildrick, Margrit.
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality
Record Type:
Electronic resources : Monograph/item
Title/Author:
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality/ Margrit Shildrick.
Author:
Shildrick, Margrit.
Published:
Basingstoke, UK ;Palgrave Macmillan, : 2009.,
Description:
vii, 215 p. ;23 cm.;
Subject:
Marginality, Social. -
Online resource:
access to fulltext (Palgrave)
ISBN:
9780230244641
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality
Shildrick, Margrit.
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality
[electronic resource] /Margrit Shildrick. - Basingstoke, UK ;Palgrave Macmillan,2009. - vii, 215 p. ;23 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Corporealities -- Genealogies -- Contested pleasures and governmentality -- Sexuality, subjectivity and anxiety -- Transgressing the law --Queer pleasures -- Global corporealities.
This innovative and adventurous book examines disability in the context of two areas - subjectivity and sexuality - in which it has been hitherto suppressed. Using feminist and postmodernist analysis, Margrit Shildrick explores what motivates the discrimination, devaluation and alienation directed at disabled people, and argues that the difference that disability encapsulates uncovers a psycho-cultural imaginary that sustains modernist understandings of what constitutes an embodied subject. Where autonomy is the most valued attribute of subjectivity, any compromise of bodily control, indication of connectivity, or of corporeal instability, mobilizes a deep-seated anxiety in the normative majority that is most acute in relation to disability and sexuality. By critiquing conventional paradigms this study shows how it becomes possible to celebrate the fluidity, unpredictability and connectivity - already associated with disability - and creatively queer understanding of the embodied self. Using an analysis that draws on critical cultural theory, emergent strands in critical disability studies, postconventional philosophy and feminist theories of the body from Merleau-Ponty to Haraway and Deleuze, and social policy and legal discourse, Shildrick argues for the need to contextualise disability as a matter of ethical import.
Electronic reproduction.
Basingstoke, England :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2010.
Mode of access:World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9780230244641
Standard No.: 10.1057/9780230244641doiSubjects--Topical Terms:
82739
Marginality, Social.
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
96803
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: HV1568 / .S454 2009
Dewey Class. No.: 305.9/08
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality
LDR
:02787nmm 2200301Ia 4500
001
159597
003
OCoLC
005
20100709082030.0
006
m d
007
cr cn|
008
160219s2009 enk sb 001 0 eng d
020
$a
9780230244641
020
$a
0230244645
024
7
$a
10.1057/9780230244641
$2
doi
035
$a
(OCoLC)497765425
035
$a
ocn497765425
040
$a
UKPGM
$b
eng
$c
UKPGM
049
$a
APTA
050
1 4
$a
HV1568
$b
.S454 2009
082
0 4
$a
305.9/08
$2
22
100
1
$a
Shildrick, Margrit.
$3
307655
245
1 0
$a
Dangerous discourses of disability, subjectivity and sexuality
$h
[electronic resource] /
$c
Margrit Shildrick.
260
$a
Basingstoke, UK ;
$a
New York :
$c
2009.
$b
Palgrave Macmillan,
300
$a
vii, 215 p. ;
$c
23 cm.
504
$a
Includes bibliographical references and index.
505
0
$a
Corporealities -- Genealogies -- Contested pleasures and governmentality -- Sexuality, subjectivity and anxiety -- Transgressing the law --Queer pleasures -- Global corporealities.
520
$a
This innovative and adventurous book examines disability in the context of two areas - subjectivity and sexuality - in which it has been hitherto suppressed. Using feminist and postmodernist analysis, Margrit Shildrick explores what motivates the discrimination, devaluation and alienation directed at disabled people, and argues that the difference that disability encapsulates uncovers a psycho-cultural imaginary that sustains modernist understandings of what constitutes an embodied subject. Where autonomy is the most valued attribute of subjectivity, any compromise of bodily control, indication of connectivity, or of corporeal instability, mobilizes a deep-seated anxiety in the normative majority that is most acute in relation to disability and sexuality. By critiquing conventional paradigms this study shows how it becomes possible to celebrate the fluidity, unpredictability and connectivity - already associated with disability - and creatively queer understanding of the embodied self. Using an analysis that draws on critical cultural theory, emergent strands in critical disability studies, postconventional philosophy and feminist theories of the body from Merleau-Ponty to Haraway and Deleuze, and social policy and legal discourse, Shildrick argues for the need to contextualise disability as a matter of ethical import.
533
$a
Electronic reproduction.
$b
Basingstoke, England :
$c
Palgrave Macmillan,
$d
2010.
$n
Mode of access:World Wide Web.
$n
System requirements: Web browser.
$n
Title from title screen (viewed on Jan. 11, 2010).
$n
Access may be restricted to users at subscribing institutions.
650
0
$a
Marginality, Social.
$3
82739
650
0
$a
People with disabilities.
$3
81749
655
7
$a
Electronic books.
$2
local.
$3
96803
710
2
$a
Palgrave Connect (Online service)
$3
227469
776
1
$c
Original
$z
9780230210561
$z
0230210562
$w
(DLC) 2009013616
$w
(OCoLC)317926986
856
4 0
$3
Palgrave Connect
$u
http://www.palgraveconnect.com/doifinder/10.1057/9780230244641
$z
access to fulltext (Palgrave)
based on 0 review(s)
Multimedia
Reviews
Add a review
and share your thoughts with other readers
Export
pickup library
Processing
...
Change password
Login