[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CFP - Edited Collection: DisAppearing DisAbility
Mon Aug 26 09:23:49 GMT 2019
*DisAppearing DisAbility – CFP *
**
*Editors: Tanya Titchkosky, Elaine Cagulada and Madeleine DeWelles (OISE
of the University of Toronto)*
*(disappearingdisability /at/ gmail.com)
<mailto:(disappearingdisability /at/ gmail.com)>***
**
This is a *Call *for chapters**for a collection of essays, between 2000
and 5000 words each, as well as creative works that show how disability
appears and disappears in our midst. This collection will serve to
introduce readers to disability studies.
Through a relational orientation to disability, the work collected here
represents a critical return to how disability appears, including its
appearance in the field of disability studies. */DisAppearing DisAbility
/*will provide a resource to Canadian colleges, universities and beyond.
Engaging political, artistic, and philosophical provocations of the
(dis)appearing act of disability in our lives, the diversity of topics
in this collection represents the singular aim of revealing what
disability means while potentially remaking these meanings in more
life-affirming ways.
There are many ways that disability appears in everyday life, often as
calamity, loss, danger, and dysfunction. This collection is dedicated to
revealing the cultural values and assumptions that make these
appearances possible while making other appearances of disability seem
impossible. Can we imagine, for example, disability appearing as /not /a
problem, as necessary, or even as desirable? This collection explores
these imaginaries by orienting to disability as a set of cultural
interpretations reflective of the worlds from which they spring and into
which disability appears and disappears, again and again.
These (dis)appearances include disability on the streets, in police
encounters, in classroom practices, in storybooks, in other textual
representations of disability, and in our everyday expectations in the
midst of unexpected encounters. Each chapter should invite the reader
into an analysis of cultural scenes of disability, scenes that are
connected to issues of race and racism, indigeneity, gender and
sexuality, class or other important social differences. This collection
is guided by the hope of being a call to engage the marginality of
disability in social thought and action, while exemplifying how to do
disability studies. Through examples of how to critically notice and
theorize current interpretations of disability, we hope this collection
will revitalize our relations to (dis)appearances of disability as
essential ways of moving, understanding, and being-in-the-world.**The
chapters, then, should bring readers closer to a humanity that weaves us
into stories of disability’s (dis)appearances in everyday life.
We invite essays, but also poetry, short stories, and other creative
works that draw out the significance of how disability becomes manifest,
yet is made to disappear, only to re-appear in unexpected forms. These
journeys into the meaning of various cultural representations of
disability are simultaneously pathways into doing disability studies.
Thus, the editors will introduce the selected chapters by drawing out
the methodological moves made by the authors. These introductions will
help readers learn about how to do a disability studies analysis — in
other words, how to do disability studies. We will also include short
excerpts of classic disability studies texts in order to further
illustrate how and why disability studies works as it does. This
curation of the chapters will enable */DisAppearing DisAbility /*to
actualize our commitment to offering university students, teachers, and
anyone interested in the meaning of disability a way into developing
deeper relations to the cultural tensions that are often present when we
are present with the (dis)appearances of disability. We aim to select
contributions of various forms, that reflect an orientation to
disability’s (dis)appearances and that unveil cultural tensions as they
entangle us and our conceptions of disability, thereby revealing how the
meaning of people becomes manifest.
Regarding tensions, contributors might consider contradictions in our
lives and how we live when contradictions present themselves /together/
in the face of disability/./ For example, attempts to move closer to
disability through diagnoses, definitions, or programs can result in
distancing ourselves from the complexity of disability. These moves can
be understood as enacting interpretive relations. We are always immersed
in interpretive relations when we perceive bodies, minds, and senses.
There is no final meaning nor certain outcome for any interpretation of
disability. Embracing this orientation nurtures the need to question how
meaning is given to disability and the social and political consequences
of doing so.
The chapters in */DisAppearing DisAbility/* orient to the inescapable
fact that we make disability meaningful through our interpretive
relations to it in ways that require further analysis. What relations to
disabilityare you called into? Whatrelations call to you?
*We invite submissions (essays between 2000 and 5000 words, and poetry,
short *
*stories, visual art with descriptions) that show how disability appears
and *
*disappears in our midst while introducing readers to doing disability
studies. *
*Your submission should include:*
·Your name **
·Title of work**
·Genre of work**
·A 500-word description of your proposed work
·A 200-word statement on your relation to disability and disability
studies as they reflect the general themes and tensions of /DisAppearing
DisAbility, /as described above, by***November 29^th , 2019 to
(disappearingdisability /at/ gmail.com) <mailto:(disappearingdisability /at/ gmail.com)> *
·Notice of acceptance January 2020
·Chapters due 6 months later.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]