The essay applies Iris Marion Young's discussion of marginalization as a form of oppression suffered differentially by specific social groups, in relation to women with disabilities. It draws on Young's frame, which desegregates 'oppression', taking it away from theories overarching and systematic structures of racism for example, or patriarchy, presenting instead the concept of oppressed groups as overlapping rather than distinct, and of oppression as multiplex and differentially affecting different social groups. The essay considers women with disabilities in terms of their vulnerability to marginalization, one of Young's five types of oppression
It is the irony of fact or situation, that a woman, who occupies half of the entire humanity, is con...
Sociologists are using intersectional lenses to examine an increasingly wider range of processes and...
This article examines the use of metaphors of disability in feminist texts. Starting from an underst...
My dissertation argues that disability profoundly shapes the thematic and aesthetic choices of black...
Disabled women (for example, Morris 1991, 1996; Sheldon 2004; Vernon 1997, 1999) have for a long tim...
In this essay, I offer tentative ruminations about the possibilities/challenges of theory and praxis...
Current trends in Disability Studies hint at an overemphasis on the social model. Much description a...
The literature on disability, gender and “race” has benefited from the political economy perspective...
This essay explores the location of disability in adult education by critiquing the research on powe...
This article includes sociological concepts of post modernity, stigma, victimization, self-actualiza...
abstract: The term disability inherently suggests a lack of ability that, if corrected or mitigated,...
Disability is commonly left out of discussions on intersectional oppression, and this omission and s...
In this essay, I will apply disability as a category of legal and historical analysis to undo the di...
Monstrous Mothers: A Feminist Disability Reading of The Babadook & The Yellow Wallpaper This essay w...
Intersectionality has been an incredibly important concept to feminism since it was first introduced...
It is the irony of fact or situation, that a woman, who occupies half of the entire humanity, is con...
Sociologists are using intersectional lenses to examine an increasingly wider range of processes and...
This article examines the use of metaphors of disability in feminist texts. Starting from an underst...
My dissertation argues that disability profoundly shapes the thematic and aesthetic choices of black...
Disabled women (for example, Morris 1991, 1996; Sheldon 2004; Vernon 1997, 1999) have for a long tim...
In this essay, I offer tentative ruminations about the possibilities/challenges of theory and praxis...
Current trends in Disability Studies hint at an overemphasis on the social model. Much description a...
The literature on disability, gender and “race” has benefited from the political economy perspective...
This essay explores the location of disability in adult education by critiquing the research on powe...
This article includes sociological concepts of post modernity, stigma, victimization, self-actualiza...
abstract: The term disability inherently suggests a lack of ability that, if corrected or mitigated,...
Disability is commonly left out of discussions on intersectional oppression, and this omission and s...
In this essay, I will apply disability as a category of legal and historical analysis to undo the di...
Monstrous Mothers: A Feminist Disability Reading of The Babadook & The Yellow Wallpaper This essay w...
Intersectionality has been an incredibly important concept to feminism since it was first introduced...
It is the irony of fact or situation, that a woman, who occupies half of the entire humanity, is con...
Sociologists are using intersectional lenses to examine an increasingly wider range of processes and...
This article examines the use of metaphors of disability in feminist texts. Starting from an underst...