This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Duke University Press
Chapter
Open Access
Index
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- FOREWORD: When Being Reader #1 Is Awesome xiii
- INTRODUCTION: Crip Genealogies59 1
-
Part I. MOBILIZATION AND COALITION
- 1. INSTITUTIONALIZATION, GENDER/SEXUALITY OPPRESSION, AND INCARCERATION WITHOUT WALLS IN SOUTH KOREA: Toward a More Radical Politics of the Deinstitutionalization Movement 61
- 2. TOWARD A FEMINIST GENEALOGY OF US DISABILITY RIGHTS: Mapping the Discursive Legacies and Labor of Black Liberation 85
- 3. CRIP LINEAGES, CRIP FUTURES: A Conversation by Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha 103
- 4. CRITICAL DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE QUESTION OF PALESTINE: Toward Decolonizing Disability 117
-
Part II. CRIP ECOLOGIES AND SENSES
- 5. RHIZOPHORA: Queering Chemical Kinship in the Agent Orange Diaspora 137
- 6. DISABILITY BEYOND HUMANS: Aurora Levins Morales and Inclusive Ontology 165
- 7. “MY MOTHER, MY LONGEST LOVER”: Cripping South Texas in Noemi Martinez’s South Texas Experience Zine Project and South Texas Experience: Love Letters 183
-
Part III. GENEALOGIES
- 8. CAN I CALL MY KENYAN EDUCATION INCLUSIVE? 201
- 9. CRIP GENEALOGIES FROM THE POSTSOCIALIST EAST 217
- 10. THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY’S 504 ACTIVISM AS A GENEALOGICAL PRECURSOR TO DISABILITY JUSTICE TODAY 239
-
Part IV. INSTITUTIONAL UNDOING
- 11. MODEL MINORITY LIFE, INTERRUPTED: Asian American Illness Memoirs 257
- 12. FILIPINA SUPERCRIP: On the Crip Poetics of Colonial Ablenationalism 277
- 13. DIFFERENTIAL BEING AND EMERGENT AGITATION 297
- AFTERWORDS: Crip Genealogies in 800 Words 319
- Bibliography 327
- Contributors 351
- Index 357
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Acknowledgments xi
- FOREWORD: When Being Reader #1 Is Awesome xiii
- INTRODUCTION: Crip Genealogies59 1
-
Part I. MOBILIZATION AND COALITION
- 1. INSTITUTIONALIZATION, GENDER/SEXUALITY OPPRESSION, AND INCARCERATION WITHOUT WALLS IN SOUTH KOREA: Toward a More Radical Politics of the Deinstitutionalization Movement 61
- 2. TOWARD A FEMINIST GENEALOGY OF US DISABILITY RIGHTS: Mapping the Discursive Legacies and Labor of Black Liberation 85
- 3. CRIP LINEAGES, CRIP FUTURES: A Conversation by Stacey Park Milbern and Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha 103
- 4. CRITICAL DISABILITY STUDIES AND THE QUESTION OF PALESTINE: Toward Decolonizing Disability 117
-
Part II. CRIP ECOLOGIES AND SENSES
- 5. RHIZOPHORA: Queering Chemical Kinship in the Agent Orange Diaspora 137
- 6. DISABILITY BEYOND HUMANS: Aurora Levins Morales and Inclusive Ontology 165
- 7. “MY MOTHER, MY LONGEST LOVER”: Cripping South Texas in Noemi Martinez’s South Texas Experience Zine Project and South Texas Experience: Love Letters 183
-
Part III. GENEALOGIES
- 8. CAN I CALL MY KENYAN EDUCATION INCLUSIVE? 201
- 9. CRIP GENEALOGIES FROM THE POSTSOCIALIST EAST 217
- 10. THE BLACK PANTHER PARTY’S 504 ACTIVISM AS A GENEALOGICAL PRECURSOR TO DISABILITY JUSTICE TODAY 239
-
Part IV. INSTITUTIONAL UNDOING
- 11. MODEL MINORITY LIFE, INTERRUPTED: Asian American Illness Memoirs 257
- 12. FILIPINA SUPERCRIP: On the Crip Poetics of Colonial Ablenationalism 277
- 13. DIFFERENTIAL BEING AND EMERGENT AGITATION 297
- AFTERWORDS: Crip Genealogies in 800 Words 319
- Bibliography 327
- Contributors 351
- Index 357