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E-grāmata: Routledge Companion to Disability and Media

Edited by (Towson University, USA), Edited by (University of Sydney, Australia), Edited by , Edited by (Curtin University, Australia)
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An authoritative and indispensable guide to disability and media, this thoughtfully curated collection features varied and provocative contributions from distinguished scholars globally, alongside next-generation research leaders.

Disability and media has emerged as a dynamic and exciting area of contemporary culture and social life. Media especially digital technologyplay a vital role in disability transformations, with widespread implications for global societies and how we understand communications. This book addresses this development, from representation and audience through technologies, innovations and challenges of the field. Through the varied and global perspectives of leading researchers, writers, and practitioners, including many authors with lived experience of disability, it covers a wide range of traditional, emergent and future media forms and formats.

International in scope and orientation, The Routledge Companion to Disability and Media offers students and scholars alike a comprehensive survey of the intersections between disability studies and media studies

This book is available as an accessible eBook. For more information, please visit https://taylorandfrancis.com/about/corporate-responsibility/accessibility-at-taylor-francis/.
List of Figures xi
List of Tables xiii
Acknowledgments xiv
Notes on Contributors xv
Foreword xxii
Faye Ginsburg
Introduction: Disability and Media-An Emergent Field 1(10)
Katie Ellis
Gerard Goggin
Beth Haller
Rosemary Curtis
Part I Imagining and Representing Disability 11(136)
1 Disability Imaginaries in the News
13(10)
Tanya Titchkosky
2 What's It All Worth? The Political Economy of Disability Representation in Indian Media
23(12)
Nookaraju Bendukurthi
Usha Raman
3 Decolonizing the Dynamics of Media Power and Media Representation Between 1830 and 1930: Australian Indigenous Peoples with Disability
35(15)
John Gilroy
o Ragen
Helen Meekosha
4 Featuring Disabled Women in Advertisements: The Commodification of Diversity?
50(9)
Ella Houston
5 Still Playing It Safe: A Comparative Analysis of Disability Narratives in The Sessions, Breathing Lessons and "On Seeing A Sex Surrogate"
59(8)
Jonathan Bartholomy
6 Mental Distress, Romance and Gender in Contemporary Films: Greenberg and Silver Linings Playbook
67(11)
Alison Wilde
7 Still Julianne: Projecting Dementia on the Silvering Screen
78(10)
Sally Chivers
8 Authentic Disability Representation on US Television Past and Present
88(13)
Beth Haller
9 The Spectacularization of Disability Sport: Brazilian and Australian Newspaper Photographs of 2012 London Paralympic Athletes
101(12)
Tatiane Hilgemberg
Katie Ellis
Madison Magladry
10 George R.R. Martin and the Two Dwarfs
113(9)
Mia Harrison
11 Embodying Metaphors: Disability Tropes in Political Cartoons
122(15)
Beth Haller
12 Resisting Erasure: Reading (Dis)Ability and Race in Speculative Media
137(10)
Sami Schalk
Part II Audience, Participation and Making Media 147(84)
13 Producerly Disability Popular Culture: The Collision of Critical and Receptive Attitudes
149(9)
Katie Ellis
14 The Bodies of Film Club: Disability, Identity and Empowerment
158(11)
Fiona Whittington-Walsh
Kya Bezanson
Christian Burton
Jaci MacKendrick
Katie Miller
Emma Sawatzky
Colton Turner
15 Disability Narratives in the News Media: A Spotlight on Africa
169(8)
Olusola Ogundola
16 Disabled Media Creators in Afghanistan, China and Somalia
177(12)
Patricia Chadwick
17 Youth with Disabilities in Africa: Bridging the Disability Divide
189(10)
Kimberly O'Haver
18 Engaging Accessibility Issues Through Mobile Videos in Montreal
199(10)
Laurence Parent
19 Pages of Life: Using a Telenovela to Promote the Inclusion of Students with Disabilities in Brazil
209(11)
Patricia Almeida
20 How Do You Write That in Sign Language? A Graphic Signed Novel as a Source of Epistemological Reflection on Writing
220(11)
Vero Leduc
Part III Media Technologies of Disability 231(96)
21 GimpGirl: Insider Perspectives on Technology and the Lives of Disabled Women
233(10)
Jennifer Cole
Jason Nolan
22 Digital Media Accessibility: An Evolving Infrastructure of Possibility
243(9)
Elizabeth Ellcessor
23 Making the Web More Interactive and Accessible for Blind People
252(12)
Jonathan Lazar
Brian Wentz
24 Social Media and Disability: It's Complicated
264(11)
Mike Kent
25 When Face-to-Face Is Screen-to-Screen: Reconsidering Mobile Media as Communication Augmentations and Alternatives
275(10)
Meryl Alper
26 Mobile Phones and Visual Impairment in South Africa: Experiences from a Small Town
285(10)
Lorenzo Dalvit
27 Video on Demand: Is This Australia's New Disability Digital Divide?
295(11)
Wayne Hawkins
28 Individuals with Physical Impairments as Life Hackers? Analyzing Online Content to Interrogate Dis/Ability and Design
306(10)
Jerry Robinson
29 Interdependence in Collaboration with Robots
316(11)
Eleanor Sandry
Part IV Innovations, Challenges and Future Terrains of Transformation 327(84)
30 Dropping the Disability Beat: Why Specialized Reporting Doesn't Solve Disability (Mis)representation
329(12)
Chelsea Temple Jones
31 Advertising Disability and the Diversity Directive
341(15)
Josh Loebner
32 Disability Advocacy in BBC's Ouch and ABC's Ramp Up
356(11)
Shawn Burns
33 Representing Difference: Disability, Digital Storytelling and Public Pedagogy
367(10)
Carla Rice
Eliza Chandler
34 Needs Must: Digital Innovations in Disability Rights Advocacy
377(10)
Filippo Trevisan
35 Disability Media Work
387(13)
Katie Ellis
Melissa Merchant
36 Books and People with Print Disabilities: Public Value and the International Disability Human Rights Agenda
400(11)
David Adair
Paul Harpur
Index 411
Katie Ellis is Associate Professor in Internet Studies and Director of the Centre for Culture and Technology at Curtin University (Australia). She has worked with people with disabilities in government, academia and the community. She has authored and edited 15 books and numerous articles on the topic, including two award-winning papers on digital access and social inclusion.

Gerard Goggin is Wee Kim Wee Chair in Communication Studies at Nanyang Technological University (Singapore). Since 2011, he has been Professor of Media and Communications at the University of Sydney. With Christopher Newell, he authored the highly influential Digital Disability (2003) and Disability in Australia (2005; winner of the Australian Human Rights Commission Arts Nonfiction Award). Other key books include Normality and Disability: Intersections Among Norms, Laws and Culture (2018; with Linda Steele and Jess Cadwallader), and Listening to Disability: Voices of Democracy (2020; with Cate Thill and Rosemary Kayess).

Beth Haller is the author of Representing Disability in an Ableist World: Essays on Mass Media (2010) and the editor of Byline of Hope: Collected Newspaper and Magazine Writing of Helen Keller (2015). She has been researching news and entertainment media images of disability since 1991. She is currently Professor of Mass Communication at Towson University in Maryland (USA), where she also teaches in the Universitys Applied Adult Disability Studies minor. She is an adjunct disability studies professor at City University of New York and York University (Canada).

Rosemary Curtis is a researcher with over 40 years experience specialising in the screen industries. Following ten years in the library at the Australian Film, TV and Radio School, Rosemary managed the research unit at the Australian Film Commission and Screen Australia from 1990 to 2009. In 2000 Rosemary was awarded the Australian Communications Research Forum award for Outstanding Contribution to Research in an area of Communications.