ENGLISH 124 Lecture 1: Disability, Identity, and Representation (An Introduction): The Disabled Figure in Culture

133 views1 pages

Document Summary

Cultural and literary criticism has generally overlooked the related perceptions of corporeal otherness with think of variously as monstrosity, mutilation, deformation, . The physically disabled are produced by way of legal, medical, political, cultural, and literary narratives that comprise an exclusionary discourse. Disability is a representation, a cultural interpretation of physical transformation or configuration, and a comparison of bodies that structures social relations and institutions. The law acknowledges disability as an impairment that substantially limits one or more of the major life activities and is also a matter of being regarded as having such an impairment . These expectations are partly founded on physiological facts about typical humans, and their sociopolitical meanings and consequences are entirely culturally determined. Culturally generated and perpetuated standards of beauty, independence, fitness, . Competence, and normalcy exclude and disable many human bodies while validating and affirming others.

Get access

Grade+20% off
$8 USD/m$10 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Grade+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
40 Verified Answers
Class+
$8 USD/m
Billed $96 USD annually
Class+
Homework Help
Study Guides
Textbook Solutions
Class Notes
Textbook Notes
Booster Class
30 Verified Answers

Related Documents