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How neurotypical hegemony reproduces a culture of exclusion-and how to overcome this with love, hope, and solidarity Ableism is embedded in our daily lives. Social life, education, work, and, especially, mental health have been organized around rigid ideas of the "ideal" and the "normal" citizen-ideas that always exclude neurodiversity. In this pathbreaking book, Chantelle Jessica Lewis and Jason Arday argue that the neurodiversity movement offers ways to mobilize against not only ableism but also other "isms" including racism and capitalism. By focusing on the prevalence of neurotypical…mehr

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Produktbeschreibung
How neurotypical hegemony reproduces a culture of exclusion-and how to overcome this with love, hope, and solidarity Ableism is embedded in our daily lives. Social life, education, work, and, especially, mental health have been organized around rigid ideas of the "ideal" and the "normal" citizen-ideas that always exclude neurodiversity. In this pathbreaking book, Chantelle Jessica Lewis and Jason Arday argue that the neurodiversity movement offers ways to mobilize against not only ableism but also other "isms" including racism and capitalism. By focusing on the prevalence of neurotypical dominance and power-or "neurotypical hegemony"-Lewis and Arday show the ways that neurotypical dominance has often been used to justify and normalize some of our more harmful cultures around productivity and value. Throughout the book, Lewis and Arday use theories of Blackness, feminism, class, and neurodivergence to offer a vision of solidarities across differences. They show that race, class, ethnicity, gender, and nation are just some of the social structures for which the politics of neurodiversity can produce an emancipatory analysis. This is a book about applying social theory in practice, taking seriously how academic research and theory can be used outside of academic spaces. With We See Things They'll Never See, Lewis and Arday issue a call to action-and a call for understanding, acceptance, and humility.


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Autorenporträt
Chantelle Jessica Lewis is the Andrew Pitt Junior Research Fellow in Black British studies at Pembroke College, University of Oxford. She is the codirector of Surviving Society Productions, associate at Leading Routes and Genius Within, and a trustee of The Sociological Review. Jason Arday is professor of sociology of education at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Cool Britannia and Multi-Ethnic Britain and a trustee of the British Sociological Association (BSA). He also sits on the ITV Cultural Advisory Council and is patron of the Adult Literacy Trust (ALT).