New Issue of the Canadian Journal of Disability Studies (Vol. 9 No. 2) "The Intersections of Critical Disability Studies and Critical Animal Studies"
Jay Dolmage
dolmage at uwaterloo.ca
Thu Jul 30 10:44:21 EDT 2020
Dear Colleagues,
The newest issue of the CJDS — a special guest-edited issue on "The Intersections of Critical Disability Studies and Critical Animal Studies"— is now live — please share widely!
https://cjds.uwaterloo.ca/index.php/cjds/issue/view/32
Thanks as always to Reviews Editor Tobin Haley, to our Knowledge Mobilization Editor Danielle Lorenz, our Alternative Formats Editor Sarah Smith, as well as Graham Faulkner and Jordan Hale at the University of Waterloo.
Huge thanks to our special issue editors Alan Santinele Martino and Sarah May Lindsay.
Introduction: The Intersections of Critical Disability Studies and Critical Animal Studies
Alan Santinele Martino, Sarah May Lindsay
Normative Tensions in the Popular Representation of Children with Disabilities and Animal-Assisted Therapy
Eric Mykhalovskiy, Rita Kanarek, Colin Hastings, Jenna Doig, Melanie Rock
Rights and Representation: Media Narratives about Disabled People and Their Service Animals in Canadian Print News
Lana Kerzner, Chelsea Temple Jones, Beth Haller, Arthur Blaser
At Both Ends of the Leash: Preventing Service-Dog Oppression Through the Practice of Dyadic-Belonging
Devon MacPherson-Mayor, Cheryl van Daalen-Smith
Interspecies Blendings and Resurrections: Material Histories of Disability and Race in Taxidermy Art
Miranda Niittynen
‘What on earth was he—man or animal?’: Posthuman Permeability in H.G. Wells’s The Island of Doctor Moreau
Anelise Farris
Tricky Ticks and Vegan Quips: The Lone Star Tick and Logics of Debility
Joshua Falek, Cameron Butler
Jay
Jay Dolmage, Ph.D
(my pronouns: he/him/his)
Editor, Canadian Journal of Disability Studies
Chair, Equity Committee of the Faculty Association of the University of Waterloo
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.
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