Discourses of normalcy are deeply imbricated in the construction of the social world and organise relations between persons, persons and the State, persons and institutions and intra-psychic relations. Conversely, discourses about pathology and the abnormal underpin the regulation and disciplining of subjectivities intersected with ideas about race, gender, sexuality, class, ethnicities, nationalisms, and other identity vectors.Scopu
Transsexual, intersexual and disabled bodies occasionally cross paths in disability studies as ill...
Intersectionality, first introduced by Kimberle Crenshaw, has become a widely accepted framework for...
Studies in medical sociology and law construct disability as anti-productive, unthinkable and uninte...
Gender and disability are aspects that are situated in a cultural matrix not divorced from socio- ec...
Transgender bodies and disabled bodies occasionally cross paths in disability studies as illustratio...
In the 1960s, the term “gender” emerged in the academic literature to indicate the socially construc...
This special issue of Continuum is published in a conjuncture where there is increased scholarly att...
This book brings together scholars to explore understandings of disability, normalcy, and the everyd...
We could perhaps view social policies as part of the discursive field surrounding bodies in modern s...
The literature on disability, gender and “race” has benefited from the political economy perspective...
From a traditional perspective, disability stood outside the normal bounds of development, belonging...
This study explores ‘care’ and ‘disability’, as they are some of the most value-laden and flexible t...
Studies in medical sociology and law construct disability as anti-productive, unthinkable and uninte...
This position statement explores the overlap between feminist and disability studies as a strand of ...
Following the work of Hannah Arendt, Michel Foucault, and Giorgio Agamben, this article offers a the...
Transsexual, intersexual and disabled bodies occasionally cross paths in disability studies as ill...
Intersectionality, first introduced by Kimberle Crenshaw, has become a widely accepted framework for...
Studies in medical sociology and law construct disability as anti-productive, unthinkable and uninte...
Gender and disability are aspects that are situated in a cultural matrix not divorced from socio- ec...
Transgender bodies and disabled bodies occasionally cross paths in disability studies as illustratio...
In the 1960s, the term “gender” emerged in the academic literature to indicate the socially construc...
This special issue of Continuum is published in a conjuncture where there is increased scholarly att...
This book brings together scholars to explore understandings of disability, normalcy, and the everyd...
We could perhaps view social policies as part of the discursive field surrounding bodies in modern s...
The literature on disability, gender and “race” has benefited from the political economy perspective...
From a traditional perspective, disability stood outside the normal bounds of development, belonging...
This study explores ‘care’ and ‘disability’, as they are some of the most value-laden and flexible t...
Studies in medical sociology and law construct disability as anti-productive, unthinkable and uninte...
This position statement explores the overlap between feminist and disability studies as a strand of ...
Following the work of Hannah Arendt, Michel Foucault, and Giorgio Agamben, this article offers a the...
Transsexual, intersexual and disabled bodies occasionally cross paths in disability studies as ill...
Intersectionality, first introduced by Kimberle Crenshaw, has become a widely accepted framework for...
Studies in medical sociology and law construct disability as anti-productive, unthinkable and uninte...