This article examines how the process of constructing knowledge on impairment has affected the institutional construction of an ethic of disability. Its primary finding is that the process of creating knowledge in a number of historical contexts was influenced more by traditions and the biases of philosophers and educators in order to signify moral and intellectual superiority, than by a desire to improve the lives of disabled people through education. The article illustrates this epistemological process in a case study of the development of Protestant asylums in the latter years of the nineteenth century
Helen Deutsch & Felicity Nussbaum (eds): Defects: Engendering the Modern Body. Ann Arbor: Univ. of M...
This article charts the emergence of the sociology of disability and examines the areas of contestat...
In this article, we identify the roots of disability studies in interdisciplinary intellectual tradi...
This article examines how the process of constructing knowledge on impairment has affected the insti...
In this article, I argue for historical epistemology as a methodology for critical disability studie...
The word Challenge is fashionable and overused in sentences synonymous with disability. Since the 19...
Examines the role that disability, both as a concept and an experience, played in seventeenth-centur...
Philosophy as Disability and Exclusion examines the history of ideas on arts in the education of peo...
The deficit model was, at one time, dominant in the study of disability, but not in disability studi...
Produced by Hawai'i University Affiliated Program on Disabilities, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, H...
Historical studies of bodily and cognitive difference have flourished in the past decade. This artic...
Social inequalities associated with disability are a disturbing feature of contemporary Western soci...
Abstract and Keywords Mainstream philosophers take for granted that disability is a predis...
This chapter canvases a number of ways that issues surrounding disability intersect with social epis...
This Article is a comparative study of disability regulations in the European Union and the United S...
Helen Deutsch & Felicity Nussbaum (eds): Defects: Engendering the Modern Body. Ann Arbor: Univ. of M...
This article charts the emergence of the sociology of disability and examines the areas of contestat...
In this article, we identify the roots of disability studies in interdisciplinary intellectual tradi...
This article examines how the process of constructing knowledge on impairment has affected the insti...
In this article, I argue for historical epistemology as a methodology for critical disability studie...
The word Challenge is fashionable and overused in sentences synonymous with disability. Since the 19...
Examines the role that disability, both as a concept and an experience, played in seventeenth-centur...
Philosophy as Disability and Exclusion examines the history of ideas on arts in the education of peo...
The deficit model was, at one time, dominant in the study of disability, but not in disability studi...
Produced by Hawai'i University Affiliated Program on Disabilities, University of Hawai'i at Manoa, H...
Historical studies of bodily and cognitive difference have flourished in the past decade. This artic...
Social inequalities associated with disability are a disturbing feature of contemporary Western soci...
Abstract and Keywords Mainstream philosophers take for granted that disability is a predis...
This chapter canvases a number of ways that issues surrounding disability intersect with social epis...
This Article is a comparative study of disability regulations in the European Union and the United S...
Helen Deutsch & Felicity Nussbaum (eds): Defects: Engendering the Modern Body. Ann Arbor: Univ. of M...
This article charts the emergence of the sociology of disability and examines the areas of contestat...
In this article, we identify the roots of disability studies in interdisciplinary intellectual tradi...