All,
To tackle and fight this, Uggh! is necessary but not sufficient. For a
first step: Does anyone have the original reference. This kind of quotes
are probably more informative to us (as opposites, that is, of course)
if we "locate" them. It is their location, their power etc, that makes
them worthy of our criticism.
H.
On 30.04.2008 14:39, James Overboe wrote:
> Hello Helen and All,
>
> Actually I am not surprised at the quote. At the risk of opening an old chestnut, Murphy's book the "silent body" as a source is often used to buttress the support for the impairment model of disability. Murphy draws on the concept of liminality - not alive and not dead disability occupying the space between.
>
> Myself I agree with the Tremain who sees impairment as socially constructed. I do not deny the materiality of the body but see it as affirming.
>
> cheers,
> Jim
>
> James Overboe
> Assistant Professor
> Sociology Department
> Cultural Analysis and Social Theory M.A. Program
> Wilfrid Laurier University
>>>> "Bryant, Helen" <[log in to unmask]> 04/30/08 8:25 AM >>>
> C H A P T E R 1 3 (In ‘Disability Studies: Past Present and
> Future’ edited by Len Barton and Mike Oliver (1997), Leeds: The
> Disability Press, pp. 217 - 233).
>
> Cultural Representation of Disabled People: dustbins for disavowal?
> Tom Shakespeare
> (First published 1994)
> http://www.leeds.ac.uk/disability-studies/archiveuk/Shakespeare/chapter13.pdf
>
> The long-term physically impaired are neither sick nor well,
> neither dead nor alive, neither out of society nor wholly in it. They
> are human beings but their bodies are warped or malfunctioning,
> leaving their full humanity in doubt. They are not ill, for illness is
> transitional to either death or recovery.... The sick person lives in
> a state of social suspension until he or she gets better. The disabled
> [sic] spend a lifetime in a similar suspended state. They are neither
> fish nor fowl; they exist in partial isolation from society as undefined,
> ambiguous people. (Murphy, 1987, p. 112)
>
> How about THIS for a quote? UGGH! Can you believe how RECENTLY it was written?
>
>
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