New Special Issue of the Canadian Journal of Disability Studies: Survival and Resilience
dolmage
dolmage at uwaterloo.ca
Tue Jul 2 08:14:07 EDT 2019
Dear Friends:
The newest (special!) issue of the CJDS is now live — please share widely!
https://cjds.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/cjds/issue/view/28
Thanks as always to Reviews Editor Tobin Haley, to our accessibility partner AbleDocs (www.abledocs.com), and to Gerard Salisi, Graham Faulkner and Jordan Hale at the University of Waterloo.
This issue, themed around Survival and Resilience, was co-edited by Dr. Katie Aubrecht and Dr. Nancy La Monica. Special thanks to these guest editors for the serious labour of putting together such an impressive, expansive, and incisive issue.
From the Foreword:
"This special issue includes 18 original works that critically examine survival and resilience as socio-political phenomena. The volume of contributions in this issue suggest the complexities of survival and resilience are important current considerations for critical disability studies scholarship and praxis. Drawing on interdisciplinary disability and mad studies perspectives, and a wide range of methodologies, including autoethnography, poetry, photography, art, commentary, as well more traditional academic methods for sociological and social-geographical, genealogical, and geopolitical analysis, these works expose, resist and rupture unexamined relations to difference and adversity."
FOREWORD
Complexities of Survival and Resilience
Katie Aubrecht, Nancy La Monica
CREATIVE WORKS
Do You Know Why You’re Here?
nancy viva davis halifax
Caterpillar; Autumn Leaves; Daffodils; Last Day
Andrea Nicki
ARTICLES
Storytelling Beyond the Psychiatric Gaze
Resisting resilience and recovery narratives
Jijian Voronka
Including Our Self In Struggle
Challenging the neo-liberal psycho-system’s subversion of us, our ideas and action
Peter Beresford
Brain Injury Survivors: Impairment, Identity and Neoliberalism
Mark Sherry
Resistance is Resilience
Kevin Healey
Resilience Governance
a good place for disabled people to shape and resist problematic resilience discourses?
Gregor Wolbring, Nicole Mfoafo-M’Carthy
Living with Herbert: Mediating Survival and Resilience
Samira Rajabi
Diaspora: Dislocation and its Resentment, or, the Impossible Dialogue of “Safe Space"
Essya M. Nabbali
“Like Bananas with Brown Spots”
Epilepsy, Embodiment, Vulnerability and Resilience in South Asia
Aparna Nair
Whose Disability (Studies)?
Defetishizing Disablement of the Iranian Survivors of the Iran-Iraq War by (Re)Telling their Resilient Narratives of Survival
Sona Kazemi Hill
Absence and Epidemic
Autism and fetal alcohol spectrum disorder in Indigenous populations in Canada
Caleigh Estelle Inman
On Survival and Education: An Academic’s Perspective on Disability
Shad Alshammari
The ‘Nothing But’
University Student Mental Health and the Hidden Curriculum of Academic Success
Katie Albrecht
Designing Access Together: Surviving the Demand for Resilience
Esther Ignagni, Eliza Chandler, Kim Collins, Andy Darby, Kirsty Liddiard
Navigating the Terrain of Dis/Ability
An Autoethnographic Cartography
Susan Docherty-Skippen
ART
Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors; Balancing the World; Underwater Wheeling; Dream of Life; Water of the World
Elaine Stewart
REVIEW ARTICLES
Reimagined Story
Kelly O'Neil
REVIEWS
Review of Jameel Hampton (2016), "Disability and the Welfare State in Britain: Changes in Perception and Policy 1948-79"
Fallon Burns
Review of Bonnie Burstow (2017), "The Other Mrs. Smith"
Sona Kazemi Hill
Jay Dolmage, Ph.D
(my pronouns: he/him/his)
Editor, Canadian Journal of Disability Studies
Professor of English
Associate Chair of English, UCOI
University of Waterloo
Department of English
224 Hagey Hall of Humanities Building
Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1
Tel: 519 888 4567 x31035
Fax: 519 746 5788
dolmage at uwaterloo.ca
If you have an accommodation need for a planned meeting, please e-mail me directly and I will do my best to make appropriate arrangements. Should you require any materials sent via this e-mail address in an alternate/accessible format, please let me know.
I acknowledge that I live and work on the traditional territory of the Attawandaron (Neutral), Anishinaabeg and Haudenosaunee peoples. The University of Waterloo is situated on the Haldimand Tract, the land promised to the Six Nations that includes ten kilometers on each side of the Grand River. In my teaching and research, I am committed to recognizing and respecting this territory.
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://artsservices.uwaterloo.ca/pipermail/artsannounce/attachments/20190702/3183dd92/attachment.html>
More information about the Artsannounce
mailing list