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[Commlist] Call for chapters: Disability in dialogue
Mon Dec 30 11:15:41 GMT 2019
Call for chapters: /Disability in dialogue/
Proposal deadline (extended): Feb. 1, 2020
Co-editors:
Jessica M. F. Hughes, Assistant Professor, Millersville University,
(jessica.hughes /at/ millersville.edu)
Mariaelena Bartesaghi, Associate Professor, University of South Florida,
(mbartesaghi /at/ usf.edu) <mailto:(mbartesaghi /at/ usf.edu)>
This is a call for an edited volume on Disability in Dialogue. We invite
chapter proposals (1500-200 words) that employ discourse studies
methodologies to analyze disabled dialogues and dialogues about
disability for a volume of interest to dialogue, communication,
disability and discourse scholars.
Everyday dialogues are consequential. Spoken, written and digital
discourse in conversations, public hearings, assessment measures, social
media sites, organizational manuals, and institutional policies defines
disabilities, grants certain bodyminds access, and excludes others. It
is through dialogue as embodied inter-action that disability dis/appears
and that disabled identities are constituted and that we experience
ableism and manage impairment. Disability is also a way of knowing.
Disabled dialogues realize our understanding of dis/ability and
communication.
As with ‘disability,’ there are many discourses of ‘dialogue.’ For us,
‘dialogue’ calls attention to interaction (whether face-to-face,
digital, or temporally distant), asymmetries (of knowledge, status,
access), dilemmas, tensions, problems, voices, and affective experience.
Analyzing disability in dialogue is a method for theorizing these and
other dimensions of discourse to account for disabled ways of knowing,
thinking, perceiving, and being in the world.
This collection was first conceived in light of the following questions.
How might we center disabled perspectives to theorize dialogue? What
sorts of ways of communicating does disability afford? How does
disability shape dialogue and vice versa? What does it mean to identify
as disabled, to claim an experience in terms of disability, to belong
within a discourse, to access a diagnosis? How does the dis/appearance
of disability rearrange the past, present, and future and redefine
relationships and experiences? What kinds of moral accounts accompany
disability in dialogue? What might be the power of dis/ability and what
sort of power is it? How is ableism constituted in dialogue? What kinds
of dialogic moments have the most potential to dismantle ableism and
make the world a more inclusive place for all bodyminds?
We invite chapters that raise these and other questions about disability
in dialogue. Chapters should start by defining dialogue and then offer
empirical analyses that pay close attention to spoken, written, and/or
other semiotic forms that constitute dialogue, in order to guide us in
an examination of the consequentiality of disabled dialogues and
discourse about disability.
Submission proposals are due February 1, 2020 and should include
*
Name(s), affiliation and contact information of author(s)
*
A 150 word bio
*
Chapter title
*
A 1500- 2000 word description of your proposed chapter plus references
Notices of acceptance will be sent by March 31, 2020. Full chapters are
due October 1, 2020.
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