With a view to interdisciplinary dialogue(s) between queer theory and disability studies, this article discusses the work of Bob Flanagan and his partner Sheree Rose. Specifically, it focuses on their queer S/M practices as a strategy of negotiating disability/pain, but also as a practice redefining notions of (disabled) embodiment. It also discusses Flanagan and Rose’s queer/crip politics as an opening for “desiring disability.
THIS ARTICLE PRESENTS a critical reading of Robert McRuer’s Crip Theory: cultural signs of queerness...
In the dissertation “Enabling Pain, Enabling Insight: Opening up Possibilities for Chronic Pain in D...
My dissertation explores conceptions of ability and ableization--a term I coin to describe the way i...
With a view to interdisciplinary dialogue(s) between queer theory and disability studies, this artic...
Drawing on my personal experiences with chronic pain, depression, and abuse, this essay critiques bo...
The paper identifies how chronic pain is a disability and lays out the ways in which a cripistemolog...
This book is a critical disability studies examination of the lived experience of chronic pain, enga...
In Feminist Queer Crip, Alison Kafer endeavours to re-politicise disability and its relations to gen...
The Queer Disability Conference, the first conference of its kind ever, held on June 2 and 3 at San ...
The medical industrial complex has historically contributed to the oppression and pathology of queer...
"The remarkable story of Sins Invalid, a performance project that centres queer disability justice. ...
Historically, gender and sexuality have been privileged sites of analysis in feminist theory. Critic...
People with disabilities are largely conceptualized as asexual; this systematically excludes disable...
Using autoethnography, this dissertation explores the relationship between my experiences through th...
This thesis investigates the current cultural discourses surrounding sexuality in persons with disab...
THIS ARTICLE PRESENTS a critical reading of Robert McRuer’s Crip Theory: cultural signs of queerness...
In the dissertation “Enabling Pain, Enabling Insight: Opening up Possibilities for Chronic Pain in D...
My dissertation explores conceptions of ability and ableization--a term I coin to describe the way i...
With a view to interdisciplinary dialogue(s) between queer theory and disability studies, this artic...
Drawing on my personal experiences with chronic pain, depression, and abuse, this essay critiques bo...
The paper identifies how chronic pain is a disability and lays out the ways in which a cripistemolog...
This book is a critical disability studies examination of the lived experience of chronic pain, enga...
In Feminist Queer Crip, Alison Kafer endeavours to re-politicise disability and its relations to gen...
The Queer Disability Conference, the first conference of its kind ever, held on June 2 and 3 at San ...
The medical industrial complex has historically contributed to the oppression and pathology of queer...
"The remarkable story of Sins Invalid, a performance project that centres queer disability justice. ...
Historically, gender and sexuality have been privileged sites of analysis in feminist theory. Critic...
People with disabilities are largely conceptualized as asexual; this systematically excludes disable...
Using autoethnography, this dissertation explores the relationship between my experiences through th...
This thesis investigates the current cultural discourses surrounding sexuality in persons with disab...
THIS ARTICLE PRESENTS a critical reading of Robert McRuer’s Crip Theory: cultural signs of queerness...
In the dissertation “Enabling Pain, Enabling Insight: Opening up Possibilities for Chronic Pain in D...
My dissertation explores conceptions of ability and ableization--a term I coin to describe the way i...