Cover image for Why I Burned My Book.
Why I Burned My Book.
Title:
Why I Burned My Book.
Author:
Longmore, Paul.
ISBN:
9781592137756
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (289 pages)
Series:
American Subjects
Contents:
Contents -- Foreword by Robert Dawidoff -- Introduction -- ONE Analyses and Reconstructions -- 1 Disability Watch -- 2 The Life of Randolph Bourne and the Need for a History of Disabled People -- 3 Uncovering the Hidden History of Disabled People -- 4 The League of the Physically Handicapped and the Great Depression: A Case Study in the New Disability History -- 5 The Disability Rights Moment: Activism in the 1970s and Beyond -- TWO Images and Reflections -- 6 Film Reviews -- 7 Screening Stereotypes: Images of Disabled People in Television and Motion Pictures -- THREE Ethics and Advocacy -- 8 Elizabeth Bouvia, Assisted Suicide, and Social Prejudice -- 9 The Resistance: The Disability Rights Movement and Assisted Suicide -- 10 Medical Decision Making and People with Disabilities: A Clash of Cultures -- FOUR Protests and Forecasts -- 11 The Second Phase: From Disability Rights to Disability Culture -- 12 Princeton and Peter Singer -- 13 Why I Burned My Book -- Index.
Abstract:
This wide-ranging book shows why Paul Longmore is one of the most respected figures in disability studies today. Understanding disability as a major variety of human experience, he urges us to establish it as a category of social, political, and historical analysis in much the same way that race, gender, and class already have been. The essays here search for the often hidden pattern of systemic prejudice and probe into the institutionalized discrimination that affects the one in five Americans with disabilities.Whether writing about the social critic Randolph Bourne, contemporary political activists, or media representations of people with disabilities, Longmore demonstrates that the search for heroes is a key part of the continuing struggle of disabled people to gain a voice and to shape their destinies. His essays on bioethics and public policy examine the conflict of agendas between disability rights activists and non-disabled policy makers, healthcare professionals, euthanasia advocates, and corporate medical bureaucracies. The title essay, which concludes the book, demonstrates the necessity of activism for any disabled person who wants access to the American dream.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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