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New Narratives of Disability: Constructions, Clashes, and Controversies [Hardback]

Edited by (University of South Florida, USA), Edited by (University of South Florida, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x20 mm, weight: 543 g
  • Sērija : Research in Social Science and Disability
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1839091444
  • ISBN-13: 9781839091445
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 119,73 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 304 pages, height x width x depth: 229x152x20 mm, weight: 543 g
  • Sērija : Research in Social Science and Disability
  • Izdošanas datums: 25-Nov-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1839091444
  • ISBN-13: 9781839091445
This volume seeks to answer the call for richer, more diverse understandings of disability through questions about narrative frameworks in disability research.Narrative is a omnipresent meaning-producing communication form in social life that is both cultural and personal.

This volume explores questions about narrative frameworks in disability research. Narrative is a omnipresent meaning-producing communication form in social life that is both cultural and personal.

Public understandings of disability tend to follow a medical storyline in which disability is a personal tragedy to be treated through professional intervention - a frame that disempowers and fails to resonate with many disabled people. Scholars in disability studies and the social sciences have proposed an alternative that portrays social structures, forces, and attitudes as the problems to be resolved - a frame that, while empowering, may neglect, or even repress, some kinds of personal disability stories.

This volume seeks to answer the call for richer, more diverse understandings of disability. We explore how narrative inquiry can broaden perspectives on disability to include pain, suffering, chronic illness, and episodic disability, as well as the perspectives of family members and caregivers, while also serving as a platform for dismantling prejudice and discrimination in order to promote positive social change.


This volume explores questions about narrative frameworks in disability research. Narrative is a omnipresent meaning-producing communication form in social life that is both cultural and personal. Public understandings of disability tend to follow a medical storyline in which disability is a personal tragedy to be treated through professional intervention - a frame that disempowers and fails to resonate with many disabled people. Scholars in disability studies and the social sciences have proposed an alternative that portrays social structures, forces, and attitudes as the problems to be resolved - a frame that, while empowering, may neglect, or even repress, some kinds of personal disability stories. This volume seeks to answer the call for richer, more diverse understandings of disability. We explore how narrative inquiry can broaden perspectives on disability to include pain, suffering, chronic illness, and episodic disability, as well as the perspectives of family members and caregivers, while also serving as a platform for dismantling prejudice and discrimination in order to promote positive social change.
Introduction Exploring Narrative as a Social Science Framework on
Disability and Disabled People; Donileen R. Loseke & Sara E. Green 
Part I: Cultural Stories of Disability and Individual Lives 
Chapter
1. Reframing the Story of Helen Keller and Anne Sullivan: Resisting
(Dis)Ability Stereotypes Through an Analysis of Children's Literature; Cheryl
Najarian Souza 
Chapter
2. 'It's Not That Way You Know, She Has a Good Future': Women's
Experiences of Disability and Community-Based Rehabilitation in Sri Lanka;
Carmen Rebecca Britton & Laura Mauldin 
Chapter
3. Test Anxiety: Participation and Exclusion beyond the Institution;
M. Nickie Coomer & Kenzie Latham-Mintus 
Chapter
4. Narratives of Care and Citizenship: Managing "Precariously Normal"
Sons and Daughters in an Age of Inequality; Linda M. Blum 
Chapter
5. 'More Than a Parent, You're a Caregiver': Narratives of Fatherhood
in Families of Adult Sons and Daughters with Life-Long Disabilities; Heidi
Steinour & Sara E. Green 
Part II: Cultural Stories of Disability and Organizations 
Chapter 6.'You Wont Tell That You Have Schizophrenia, Right? You Should Say
You Have a Small Depression': Organizational Narratives of 'Adjusted' Workers
with Disabilities and the Rhetoric of Reassurance in France; Lisa D.
Buchter 
Chapter
7. 'I Want to Go Places on My Own': A Case-Study of Virginia
Commonwealth University Ace-It in College; Stephanie J. Lau & Liza H. Weiss 
Chapter
8. More than Therapy: Conformity and Resistance in an Organizational
Narrative of Disability and the Performing Arts; Melinda Leigh Maconi 
Part III: Cultural Stories of Disability and Social Policies 
Chapter
9. Narrative Productions of Problems and People in the Americans with
Disabilities Amendment Act; Melissa Jane Welch 
Chapter
10. Institutional and Personal Narratives of Chronic Pain Management:
Interrogating the Medical and Social Models of Disability; Loren E. Wilbers 
Chapter
11. Stuck in Transition With You: Variable Pathways to
In(ter)dependence for Emerging Adult Men With Mobility Impairments; J. Dalton
Stevens 
Chapter
12. Conflicting Narratives of Corporeal Citizenship: Medicaid
Personal Care Attendant (PCA) Policy and Experiences of Cross-State Move
Plans and Pursuits; Brian R. Grossman 
Part IV: Cultural Stories of Disability and Resistance 
Chapter
13. Neither Victim Nor Super-Hero: Reflections on Disability and
Mental Health Counseling; Richard A. Chapman 
Chapter
14. Self-Study of Intersectional and Emotional Narratives: Narrative
Inquiry, Disability Studies in Education, and Praxis in Social Science
Research; Lisa Boskovich, Mercedes Adell Cannon, David Hernandez-Saca, Laurie
Gutmann Kahn & Emily A. Nusbaum 
Chapter
15. Neoliberalism and the Fight for the Child: Narratives of Queer
Mothering; Ahoo Tabatabai 
Chapter
16. Sick and Tired: Narratives of Contested Illness in Chronic
Fatigue Syndrome Blogs; Morgan V. Sanchez 
Chapter
17. 'We Love Each Other Into Meaning': Queer Disabled Tumblr Users
Constructing Identity Narratives through Love and Anger; Justine E. Egner
Sara E. Green, Ph.D. is Director of the Interdisciplinary Social Sciences Program and Professor of Sociology at the University of South Florida, USA; past chair and career award recipient of the American Sociological Association (ASA) Section on Disability & Society; and past co-chair of the ASA Committee on the Status of Persons with Disabilities. Donileen R. Loseke, Ph.D. is Professor of Sociology at the University of South Florida, USA; Past President of both the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction and the Society for the Study of Social Problems; and received the Mead, Cooley and Mentor Awards from the Society for the Study of Symbolic Interaction.