This chapter examines hirsutism and the idea that reading a woman as hairy is a form of social control, and as such, is a disabling force. First of all, I describe some of the ways in which hair has been read and written about in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Then I look at some recent work linking Crip and Queer Theory, highlighting the idea of the policing ‘stare’, which Inckle argues ‘constitutes disabled experience’, and radical embodiment in particular. I chose most of these texts because they critique Sally Munt’s appropriation of the disabled toilet facility as a queer space and because they talk of a ‘politics of hope’ describing the possibility for ‘queercrip alliances’: an embodied challenge to normative assumptions in...
Decadence is a polymorphous concept most often denoting decline and ruination, or pleasure, artifice...
Hair, like skin color, is a social marker that distinguishes Blacks from others\ud and has essential...
Cininas, J. Wolf girls and hirsute heroines: fur, hair and the feminine. PAN : philosophy activism n...
Western society has long had a complicated relationship with fur. Depending on the context, furry ve...
The way we modify and view hair culturally has important resonances, not only for the construction o...
Beard the Bully is an extract of a literary memoir about female facial hair. This work explores the ...
Hirsutism can be one of the most distressing conditions for women. It is a symptom that is occasiona...
This chapter focuses on the notion that particular ways of understanding femininity have been histor...
Excess facial hair is a characteristic of hirsutism. Excess facial hair can alter a woman\u27s prese...
This study explores the subject matter regarding head hair, a relatively understudied area in earlie...
This paper questions the connection between vaginas and feminist embodiment in The Vagina Monologues...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the past two decades body hair has fast become a taboo for women. T...
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. Do women with body hair continue to evoke disgust? Are...
Hair could be read as queer in that it crosses the cultural boundaries of the body, because it embod...
This chapter explores head and body hair as a constant (and historically consistent) means of specta...
Decadence is a polymorphous concept most often denoting decline and ruination, or pleasure, artifice...
Hair, like skin color, is a social marker that distinguishes Blacks from others\ud and has essential...
Cininas, J. Wolf girls and hirsute heroines: fur, hair and the feminine. PAN : philosophy activism n...
Western society has long had a complicated relationship with fur. Depending on the context, furry ve...
The way we modify and view hair culturally has important resonances, not only for the construction o...
Beard the Bully is an extract of a literary memoir about female facial hair. This work explores the ...
Hirsutism can be one of the most distressing conditions for women. It is a symptom that is occasiona...
This chapter focuses on the notion that particular ways of understanding femininity have been histor...
Excess facial hair is a characteristic of hirsutism. Excess facial hair can alter a woman\u27s prese...
This study explores the subject matter regarding head hair, a relatively understudied area in earlie...
This paper questions the connection between vaginas and feminist embodiment in The Vagina Monologues...
Item does not contain fulltextIn the past two decades body hair has fast become a taboo for women. T...
© 2019, © 2019 Taylor & Francis Group, LLC. Do women with body hair continue to evoke disgust? Are...
Hair could be read as queer in that it crosses the cultural boundaries of the body, because it embod...
This chapter explores head and body hair as a constant (and historically consistent) means of specta...
Decadence is a polymorphous concept most often denoting decline and ruination, or pleasure, artifice...
Hair, like skin color, is a social marker that distinguishes Blacks from others\ud and has essential...
Cininas, J. Wolf girls and hirsute heroines: fur, hair and the feminine. PAN : philosophy activism n...