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xi | |
Acknowledgements |
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xi | |
Introduction: Thinking about Disability, Rethinking Difference |
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1 | (24) |
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Some Definitions: `Disability', `Disablism' and `Ableism' |
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8 | (5) |
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Why Historians of Empire Need to Look at Disability: An Argument and an Agenda |
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13 | (6) |
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Scope: Structure, Place and Time |
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19 | (6) |
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1 Disability and Otherness in the British Empire: Disablement as a Discourse of Difference |
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25 | (37) |
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The Emergence of Disability in the Nineteenth Century |
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28 | (6) |
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The Power of Categorisation: Disability and the Census |
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34 | (6) |
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`An Unfortunate Race': Pity as a Discourse of Difference |
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40 | (2) |
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Colonialism and Slavery: The Production of Disabled Populations |
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42 | (3) |
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Blackness as a Marker of Disability, Disability as a Marker of Racial Difference |
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45 | (7) |
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Whiteness: Disability as Aberration |
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52 | (3) |
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`Sick Continents': Disability as Metaphor |
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55 | (2) |
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Intertwined Histories: Disability, Empire and Race |
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57 | (3) |
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60 | (2) |
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2 Saving the Other at Home and Overseas: Philanthropy, Education and the State |
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62 | (31) |
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Educating Disabled People in Britain and Ireland: Schools, Missions and Institutions |
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63 | (8) |
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Special Education in the Settler Colonies |
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71 | (2) |
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73 | (4) |
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Missions to the Blind and Deaf `Overseas' |
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77 | (9) |
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The Role of the State in Britain |
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86 | (2) |
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Extending the Commission Overseas |
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88 | (2) |
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Philanthropy as a Marker of Civilisation |
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90 | (1) |
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91 | (2) |
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3 `A Fearfully and Wonderfully Made Individual': Exhibiting Bodily Anomaly |
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93 | (30) |
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Disability and the Victorian Freak Show |
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95 | (2) |
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The Freak Show and Difference |
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97 | (2) |
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Joseph Merrick, the `Elephant Man' |
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99 | (4) |
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Displaying Disabled People Who Were Also Racially Different: Chang and Eng Bunker, the `Original Siamese Twins', and Tom Wiggins, `Blind Tom' |
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103 | (9) |
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Races of Disabled People: Krao, the `Missing Link', and Maximo and Bartola, the `Aztec Lilliputians' |
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112 | (7) |
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Exhibiting Disability beyond the Freak Show |
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119 | (2) |
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121 | (2) |
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4 Signs of Humanity: Language and Civilisation |
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123 | (25) |
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Animals, Humanity and the Question of Language |
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125 | (2) |
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Speech, Disability and Humanity |
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127 | (4) |
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131 | (3) |
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134 | (3) |
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Explaining the Rise of Oralism |
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137 | (1) |
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Putting Race and Disability in the Same Analytic Frame |
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138 | (2) |
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Sign Language and Otherness |
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140 | (2) |
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The Politics of Language in the British Empire |
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142 | (4) |
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Conclusion: An English-Speaking Subject |
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146 | (2) |
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5 A Deaf Imaginary: Disability, Nationhood and Belonging in the `British World' |
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148 | (34) |
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Deaf Communities in the British Isles |
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150 | (1) |
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Deaf Schools, Associations and Churches |
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151 | (3) |
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154 | (4) |
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158 | (2) |
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The British Deaf Community and the Wider Deaf World |
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160 | (1) |
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161 | (1) |
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Gesturia, Deaf-Mutia or Gallaudetia: Imagining a `Deaf State' in Nineteenth-Century America |
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162 | (6) |
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Jane Groom and the Creation of a Deaf Colony in Canada |
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168 | (4) |
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Other Deaf Settlements in Canada |
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172 | (1) |
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173 | (1) |
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173 | (6) |
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Conclusion: Belonging, Nationhood and Deafness |
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179 | (3) |
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6 Immigration: Racism, Ableism and Exclusion |
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182 | (33) |
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`The Maimed, Mutilated or Silly Ought Not Go There': Restricting `Unfit' Immigrants |
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187 | (10) |
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Bodies at the Border: The Valuation of People |
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197 | (6) |
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Hiding, Passing, Contesting and Resisting: Performing Disability for the Immigration Inspectors |
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203 | (5) |
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Banishing Undesirables: Deportation, Disability and National Belonging |
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208 | (5) |
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213 | (2) |
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7 The Health of the Nation: Class, Race, Gender and Disability in Imperial Britain |
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215 | (31) |
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216 | (10) |
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The Fallout from the South African War: The Question of National Efficiency |
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226 | (10) |
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A Class Apart and a Threat to the Race: `Feeble-Mindedness' as an Imperial Issue |
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236 | (8) |
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244 | (2) |
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246 | (6) |
Bibliography |
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252 | (33) |
Index |
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285 | |