Disability studies after the ontological turn: a return to the material world and material bodies without a return to essentialism
Type de ressource
Auteur/contributeur
- Feely, Michael (Auteur)
Titre
Disability studies after the ontological turn: a return to the material world and material bodies without a return to essentialism
Résumé
Over recent decades, poststructuralist theories have allowed critical disability scholars to challenge essentialist understandings of the human species and to contest discourses which divide humans into ‘normal’/‘impaired’ subjects with respect to a wide – and ever expanding – range of corporeal and cognitive traits. For critics, however, these theories are deeply flawed. By focusing primarily on language, poststructuralism shifts our critical attention away from the often harsh material realities of life for disabled people. This has led some to turn to critical realism and to effectively re-essentialise impairment. In this article, I wish to consider an alternative approach. I suggest that the recent ‘ontological turn’ in social theory has seen the emergence of new-materialist approaches – including Deleuze and Guattari’s ontology of assemblage and methodology of assemblage analysis – which allow us to consider disability as a material phenomenon without a return to essentialism.
Publication
Disability & Society
Volume
31
Numéro
7
Pages
863-883
Date
2016
Langue
Anglais
Titre abrégé
Disability studies after the ontological turn
Consulté le
07/12/2024 19:39
Catalogue de bibl.
WorldCat Discovery Service
Référence
Feely, Michael. (2016). Disability studies after the ontological turn: a return to the material world and material bodies without a return to essentialism. Disability & Society, 31(7), 863‑883. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2016.1208603
Approches et analyses
Cours
Discipline
Périodes historiques
Thématiques
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