Disability & Embodiment

Books & Chapters

  • Alland, S., Barokka, K., & Sluman, D. (Eds.). (2017). Stairs and whispers: D/deaf and disabled poets write back. Nine Arches Press.
  • Barnes, E. (2016). The minority body: A theory of disability. Oxford University Press.
  • Bernansky, T. (2022). Working to end gender-based violence in the disability community: International perspectives. Practical Action Publishing, Ltd.
  • Clare, E. (2017). Brilliant imperfection: Grappling with cure. Duke University Press.
  • Leduc, A. (2020). Disfigured: On fairy tales, disability, and making space. Coach House Books.
  • Miller, E. L. (2022). Embodying literacy: From compulsory to complex. In What it means to be literate: A disability materiality approach to literacy after aphasia (pp. 76-104). University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Mitchell, D. T. (2015). Neoliberalism, ablenationalism, and peripheral embodiment. University of Michigan Press.
  • Moore, A. E. (2023). Body horror: Capitalism, misogyny, jokes. The Feminist Press. 
  • Piepzna-Samarasinha, L. L. (2018). Care work: Dreaming disability justice. Arsenal Pulp Press.
  • Pieri, M. (2023). LGBTQ+ people with chronic illness: Chroniqueers in southern Europe. Palgrave Macmillan. 
  • Sandahl, C., & Auslander, P. (Eds.). (2005). Bodies in commotion: Disability & performance. University of Michigan Press.
  • Shew, A. (2023). Against technoableism: Rethinking who needs improvement. W. W. Norton & Co. 
  • Taussig, R. (2020). Sitting pretty: The view from my ordinary resilient disabled body. HarperCollins.
  • Wilkerson, A. (2015). Embodiment. In B. Reiss, D. Serlin, & R. Adams (Eds.), Keywords in disability studies (pp. 67-70). NYU Press.
  • Wong, A. (Ed.). (2024). Disability intimacy: Essays on love, care, and desire. Penguin Random House.

Articles

Multimedia