In this study, I argue that certain novels and archival sources of the eighteenth century depict deafness, disfigurement, and other forms of physical disability in unexpectedly empowering ways, and I demonstrate how these representations intersect with, and are informed by, unauthorized--or queer--genders and sexualities. Moreover, I show that the fiction of Eliza Haywood, Sarah Scott, and Frances Burney challenge ahistorical assumptions that disabled people have only been thought of as powerless, uneducated, and asexual in previous eras. My contention that eighteenth-century physical disability is constructed along a parallel cultural continuum to that of queerness engages with, and intervenes in, contemporary debates in queer theory and d...