Dr Shelley Lynn Tremain (Canada Independent Researcher)
The Bloomsbury Guide to Philosophy of Disability
Herausgeber: Tremain, Shelley Lynn
Dr Shelley Lynn Tremain (Canada Independent Researcher)
The Bloomsbury Guide to Philosophy of Disability
Herausgeber: Tremain, Shelley Lynn
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The first book of intersectional and inclusive writings on the philosophy of disability. A guide to a burgeoning and urgent field of thought.
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The first book of intersectional and inclusive writings on the philosophy of disability. A guide to a burgeoning and urgent field of thought.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 624
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 164mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1098g
- ISBN-13: 9781350268890
- ISBN-10: 1350268895
- Artikelnr.: 67655910
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
- Seitenzahl: 624
- Erscheinungstermin: 14. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 242mm x 164mm x 40mm
- Gewicht: 1098g
- ISBN-13: 9781350268890
- ISBN-10: 1350268895
- Artikelnr.: 67655910
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Shelley Lynn Tremain has a Ph.D in philosophy and is Coordinator of the BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY blog where she publishes Dialogues on Disability, a groundbreaking and critically acclaimed series of interviews with disabled philosophers. Tremain is author of the award-winning Foucault and Feminist Philosophy of Disability (2017) and editor of two editions of Foucault and the Government of Disability (2005, 2015).
Foreword
Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University
USA) Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION: New Movement in Philosophy: Philosophy of Disability
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) Part I: Desegregating The Disciplines 1. Disaster Ableism
Epistemologies of Crisis
and the Mystique of Bioethics
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) 2. Would you Kill the Fat Man Hypothetical? Fat Stigma in Philosophy
Kristin Rodier (Athabasca University
Canada) and Samantha Brennan (University of Guelph
Canada) 3. Pruriently Feared: Theoretical Erasure of the Disabled Black Male
Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh
UK) 4. Disability
Dissonance
and Resistance: A Musical Dialogue
Licia Carlson (Providence College
USA) 5. Neurodiversity
Anti-Psychiatry
and the Politics of Mental Health
Robert Chapman (Durham University
UK) 6. Disability and African Philosophy
Julie E. Maybee (Lehman College
CUNY
USA) Part II: Mechanisms of Oppression 7. The Apparatus of Addiction: Substance Use at the Crossroads of Colonial Ableism and Migration
Andrea J. Pitts (University of Buffalo
USA) 8. Disability
Ableism
Class
and Chronic Fatigue
Mich Ciurria ( University of Missouri at St. Louis
USA) 9. Algorithms as Ableist Orientation Devices: The Technosocial Inheritance of Colonialism and Ableism
Johnathan Flowers (California State University
Northridge
USA) 10. The Art of Kinship: An Intersectional Reading of Assisted Reproductive Practices
Desiree Valentine (Marquette University
USA) 11. Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Authority on Autism
Amandine Catala (Université du Québec à Montréal
Canada) Part III: Phenomenologies of Access and Exclusion 12. Disability
Access
and the Promise of Inclusion: Returning to Institutional Language through a Phenomenological Lens
Corinne Lajoie (The Pennsylvania State University
USA) 13. Stuttering and Ableism: A Study of Eventfulness
Joshua St. Pierre (University of Alberta
Canada) 14. Frantz Fanon and Disability: Frictions and Solidarities
Emily R. Douglas (Athabasca University
Canada) 15. Exemption
Self-exemption
and Compassionate Self-excuse
Sofia Jeppsson (Umeå Universitet
Sweden) 16. Pathologizing Disabled and Trans Identities: How Emotions Become Marginalized
Gen Eickers (Universität Bayreuth
Germany) Part IV: Disabling Normativities 17. A Crip Reading of Filipino Philosophy
Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril (University of Edinburgh
UK) 18. Recognizing Human Flourishing in the Context of Disability
Jordan Joseph Wadden (The University of British Columbia
Canada) and Tim Stainton (The University of British Columbia
Canada) 19. Neurodiversity and the Ethics of Access
August Gorman (Oakland University
USA) 20. The Ethics of Disability Passing and Uncovering in the Philosophy Classroom
Joseph A. Stramondo (San Diego State University
USA) 21. Inclusive Ethics: A Precautionary Principle
Stephanie Jenkins (Oregon State University
USA) Part V: Resisting Epistemologies 22. Risking Ourselves
Together: The Politics and Persons of Risk
Melinda C. Hall (Stetson University
USA) 23. Disablement and Ageism
Christine Overall (Queen's University
Canada) 24. Power-Knowledge and Epistemic Injustice in Employment for Disabled Adults
Josh Dohmen (Mississippi University for Women
USA) 25. "But you don't look autistic": Resisting Neurotypical Narratives
Nathan Moore (Canada) 26. Nocebos Talk Back: Marked Bodied Experience and the Dynamics of Health Inequality
Suze G. Berkhout (University of Toronto
Canada) and Ada S. Jaarsma (Mount Royal University
Canada) Index List of Contributors
Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University
USA) Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION: New Movement in Philosophy: Philosophy of Disability
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) Part I: Desegregating The Disciplines 1. Disaster Ableism
Epistemologies of Crisis
and the Mystique of Bioethics
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) 2. Would you Kill the Fat Man Hypothetical? Fat Stigma in Philosophy
Kristin Rodier (Athabasca University
Canada) and Samantha Brennan (University of Guelph
Canada) 3. Pruriently Feared: Theoretical Erasure of the Disabled Black Male
Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh
UK) 4. Disability
Dissonance
and Resistance: A Musical Dialogue
Licia Carlson (Providence College
USA) 5. Neurodiversity
Anti-Psychiatry
and the Politics of Mental Health
Robert Chapman (Durham University
UK) 6. Disability and African Philosophy
Julie E. Maybee (Lehman College
CUNY
USA) Part II: Mechanisms of Oppression 7. The Apparatus of Addiction: Substance Use at the Crossroads of Colonial Ableism and Migration
Andrea J. Pitts (University of Buffalo
USA) 8. Disability
Ableism
Class
and Chronic Fatigue
Mich Ciurria ( University of Missouri at St. Louis
USA) 9. Algorithms as Ableist Orientation Devices: The Technosocial Inheritance of Colonialism and Ableism
Johnathan Flowers (California State University
Northridge
USA) 10. The Art of Kinship: An Intersectional Reading of Assisted Reproductive Practices
Desiree Valentine (Marquette University
USA) 11. Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Authority on Autism
Amandine Catala (Université du Québec à Montréal
Canada) Part III: Phenomenologies of Access and Exclusion 12. Disability
Access
and the Promise of Inclusion: Returning to Institutional Language through a Phenomenological Lens
Corinne Lajoie (The Pennsylvania State University
USA) 13. Stuttering and Ableism: A Study of Eventfulness
Joshua St. Pierre (University of Alberta
Canada) 14. Frantz Fanon and Disability: Frictions and Solidarities
Emily R. Douglas (Athabasca University
Canada) 15. Exemption
Self-exemption
and Compassionate Self-excuse
Sofia Jeppsson (Umeå Universitet
Sweden) 16. Pathologizing Disabled and Trans Identities: How Emotions Become Marginalized
Gen Eickers (Universität Bayreuth
Germany) Part IV: Disabling Normativities 17. A Crip Reading of Filipino Philosophy
Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril (University of Edinburgh
UK) 18. Recognizing Human Flourishing in the Context of Disability
Jordan Joseph Wadden (The University of British Columbia
Canada) and Tim Stainton (The University of British Columbia
Canada) 19. Neurodiversity and the Ethics of Access
August Gorman (Oakland University
USA) 20. The Ethics of Disability Passing and Uncovering in the Philosophy Classroom
Joseph A. Stramondo (San Diego State University
USA) 21. Inclusive Ethics: A Precautionary Principle
Stephanie Jenkins (Oregon State University
USA) Part V: Resisting Epistemologies 22. Risking Ourselves
Together: The Politics and Persons of Risk
Melinda C. Hall (Stetson University
USA) 23. Disablement and Ageism
Christine Overall (Queen's University
Canada) 24. Power-Knowledge and Epistemic Injustice in Employment for Disabled Adults
Josh Dohmen (Mississippi University for Women
USA) 25. "But you don't look autistic": Resisting Neurotypical Narratives
Nathan Moore (Canada) 26. Nocebos Talk Back: Marked Bodied Experience and the Dynamics of Health Inequality
Suze G. Berkhout (University of Toronto
Canada) and Ada S. Jaarsma (Mount Royal University
Canada) Index List of Contributors
Foreword
Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University
USA) Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION: New Movement in Philosophy: Philosophy of Disability
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) Part I: Desegregating The Disciplines 1. Disaster Ableism
Epistemologies of Crisis
and the Mystique of Bioethics
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) 2. Would you Kill the Fat Man Hypothetical? Fat Stigma in Philosophy
Kristin Rodier (Athabasca University
Canada) and Samantha Brennan (University of Guelph
Canada) 3. Pruriently Feared: Theoretical Erasure of the Disabled Black Male
Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh
UK) 4. Disability
Dissonance
and Resistance: A Musical Dialogue
Licia Carlson (Providence College
USA) 5. Neurodiversity
Anti-Psychiatry
and the Politics of Mental Health
Robert Chapman (Durham University
UK) 6. Disability and African Philosophy
Julie E. Maybee (Lehman College
CUNY
USA) Part II: Mechanisms of Oppression 7. The Apparatus of Addiction: Substance Use at the Crossroads of Colonial Ableism and Migration
Andrea J. Pitts (University of Buffalo
USA) 8. Disability
Ableism
Class
and Chronic Fatigue
Mich Ciurria ( University of Missouri at St. Louis
USA) 9. Algorithms as Ableist Orientation Devices: The Technosocial Inheritance of Colonialism and Ableism
Johnathan Flowers (California State University
Northridge
USA) 10. The Art of Kinship: An Intersectional Reading of Assisted Reproductive Practices
Desiree Valentine (Marquette University
USA) 11. Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Authority on Autism
Amandine Catala (Université du Québec à Montréal
Canada) Part III: Phenomenologies of Access and Exclusion 12. Disability
Access
and the Promise of Inclusion: Returning to Institutional Language through a Phenomenological Lens
Corinne Lajoie (The Pennsylvania State University
USA) 13. Stuttering and Ableism: A Study of Eventfulness
Joshua St. Pierre (University of Alberta
Canada) 14. Frantz Fanon and Disability: Frictions and Solidarities
Emily R. Douglas (Athabasca University
Canada) 15. Exemption
Self-exemption
and Compassionate Self-excuse
Sofia Jeppsson (Umeå Universitet
Sweden) 16. Pathologizing Disabled and Trans Identities: How Emotions Become Marginalized
Gen Eickers (Universität Bayreuth
Germany) Part IV: Disabling Normativities 17. A Crip Reading of Filipino Philosophy
Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril (University of Edinburgh
UK) 18. Recognizing Human Flourishing in the Context of Disability
Jordan Joseph Wadden (The University of British Columbia
Canada) and Tim Stainton (The University of British Columbia
Canada) 19. Neurodiversity and the Ethics of Access
August Gorman (Oakland University
USA) 20. The Ethics of Disability Passing and Uncovering in the Philosophy Classroom
Joseph A. Stramondo (San Diego State University
USA) 21. Inclusive Ethics: A Precautionary Principle
Stephanie Jenkins (Oregon State University
USA) Part V: Resisting Epistemologies 22. Risking Ourselves
Together: The Politics and Persons of Risk
Melinda C. Hall (Stetson University
USA) 23. Disablement and Ageism
Christine Overall (Queen's University
Canada) 24. Power-Knowledge and Epistemic Injustice in Employment for Disabled Adults
Josh Dohmen (Mississippi University for Women
USA) 25. "But you don't look autistic": Resisting Neurotypical Narratives
Nathan Moore (Canada) 26. Nocebos Talk Back: Marked Bodied Experience and the Dynamics of Health Inequality
Suze G. Berkhout (University of Toronto
Canada) and Ada S. Jaarsma (Mount Royal University
Canada) Index List of Contributors
Lori Gruen (Wesleyan University
USA) Acknowledgements INTRODUCTION: New Movement in Philosophy: Philosophy of Disability
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) Part I: Desegregating The Disciplines 1. Disaster Ableism
Epistemologies of Crisis
and the Mystique of Bioethics
Shelley Lynn Tremain (Coordinator of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
Canada) 2. Would you Kill the Fat Man Hypothetical? Fat Stigma in Philosophy
Kristin Rodier (Athabasca University
Canada) and Samantha Brennan (University of Guelph
Canada) 3. Pruriently Feared: Theoretical Erasure of the Disabled Black Male
Tommy J. Curry (University of Edinburgh
UK) 4. Disability
Dissonance
and Resistance: A Musical Dialogue
Licia Carlson (Providence College
USA) 5. Neurodiversity
Anti-Psychiatry
and the Politics of Mental Health
Robert Chapman (Durham University
UK) 6. Disability and African Philosophy
Julie E. Maybee (Lehman College
CUNY
USA) Part II: Mechanisms of Oppression 7. The Apparatus of Addiction: Substance Use at the Crossroads of Colonial Ableism and Migration
Andrea J. Pitts (University of Buffalo
USA) 8. Disability
Ableism
Class
and Chronic Fatigue
Mich Ciurria ( University of Missouri at St. Louis
USA) 9. Algorithms as Ableist Orientation Devices: The Technosocial Inheritance of Colonialism and Ableism
Johnathan Flowers (California State University
Northridge
USA) 10. The Art of Kinship: An Intersectional Reading of Assisted Reproductive Practices
Desiree Valentine (Marquette University
USA) 11. Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Authority on Autism
Amandine Catala (Université du Québec à Montréal
Canada) Part III: Phenomenologies of Access and Exclusion 12. Disability
Access
and the Promise of Inclusion: Returning to Institutional Language through a Phenomenological Lens
Corinne Lajoie (The Pennsylvania State University
USA) 13. Stuttering and Ableism: A Study of Eventfulness
Joshua St. Pierre (University of Alberta
Canada) 14. Frantz Fanon and Disability: Frictions and Solidarities
Emily R. Douglas (Athabasca University
Canada) 15. Exemption
Self-exemption
and Compassionate Self-excuse
Sofia Jeppsson (Umeå Universitet
Sweden) 16. Pathologizing Disabled and Trans Identities: How Emotions Become Marginalized
Gen Eickers (Universität Bayreuth
Germany) Part IV: Disabling Normativities 17. A Crip Reading of Filipino Philosophy
Élaina Gauthier-Mamaril (University of Edinburgh
UK) 18. Recognizing Human Flourishing in the Context of Disability
Jordan Joseph Wadden (The University of British Columbia
Canada) and Tim Stainton (The University of British Columbia
Canada) 19. Neurodiversity and the Ethics of Access
August Gorman (Oakland University
USA) 20. The Ethics of Disability Passing and Uncovering in the Philosophy Classroom
Joseph A. Stramondo (San Diego State University
USA) 21. Inclusive Ethics: A Precautionary Principle
Stephanie Jenkins (Oregon State University
USA) Part V: Resisting Epistemologies 22. Risking Ourselves
Together: The Politics and Persons of Risk
Melinda C. Hall (Stetson University
USA) 23. Disablement and Ageism
Christine Overall (Queen's University
Canada) 24. Power-Knowledge and Epistemic Injustice in Employment for Disabled Adults
Josh Dohmen (Mississippi University for Women
USA) 25. "But you don't look autistic": Resisting Neurotypical Narratives
Nathan Moore (Canada) 26. Nocebos Talk Back: Marked Bodied Experience and the Dynamics of Health Inequality
Suze G. Berkhout (University of Toronto
Canada) and Ada S. Jaarsma (Mount Royal University
Canada) Index List of Contributors







