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DISABILITY-RESEARCH  November 2000

DISABILITY-RESEARCH November 2000

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Subject:

Re: Can we move on? THE HOMOPHOBIA ISSUE..PLEASE READ

From:

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Reply-To:

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Date:

Fri, 10 Nov 2000 21:03:45 EST

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Dear John,

    I wanted to respond to your email...in a non-hostile way of course.  I 
found some of your statements to be problematic and exclusionary.

You wrote:

>my understanding is that this list is for the discussion of issues relating 
to 
>disabilities and research and thinking within that specific area.  Unless we 
are 
>going to suggest that homosexuality and marriage are disabling conditions,
>I am not sure that the current discussion is wholly appropriate.

It is my understanding that the focus of disability studies is not (or should 
not be) as myopic as you suggest.  An email sent to Philip on this listserve 
by [log in to unmask] sums up this point:

    "I think that disability studies deals with people who have been and are 
marginalized in our societies.  Lesbians, gay men, transgendered people 
bisexuals --not so long ago the term of art was "sexual deviants" -- have 
been and are similarly marginalized.  There is significant overlap between 
the power to define "sexual deviance" and "cripple."  And of course, the 
scholars and the studied in Disability studies are not exclusively 
heterosexual.  While I may not yet understand all the ins and outs of this 
marginalization, its history and continuing strength, I do firmly believe 
that people engaged in disability studies must respect people in their full 
diversity."

Homophobia and heterosexism are extremely valid issues for discussion in this 
venue.  Not only valid, but imperative!  There is little research present in 
disability studies that is inclusive of individuals who experience multiple 
layers of oppression; specifically lesbians/gays/bisexuals/transgendered with 
disabilities.  

"Corbett (1994) argues that disabled gay men and lesbians experience a form 
of 'double invisibility' because they feel that 'I am invisible in the 
lesbian and gay community as a disabled person, as lesbians and gays are in 
the straight community and I feel I am invisible as a lesbian in the 
disability community' (p. 355)" (Shakespeare,  1998).

"To date almost all research on disabled men and women seems to assume the 
irrelevance of gender, race, ethnicity, *sexual orientation*, or social 
class.  Having a disability presumably eclipses these dimensions of social 
experience"  (Fine and Asch,  1998).

"The majority of literature on disabled women assumes them to be Caucasian 
and physically disabled...voices of disabled lesbians were minimal if at all 
present...the lives and accomplishments of disabled lesbians are completely 
invisible."  (O'toole and Bregante,  1993)

This lack of research and validation in disability studies is exclusionary 
and adds to a general feeling of 'disconformation'.  Marginalization and 
hierarchy within the majority group occurs as a result.  It seems to me that 
disability scholars are playing a complicit part in societal discriminatory 
practices.  The resulting departmental compartmentalization within disability 
studies is disheartening to say the least.

"While many disability organizations support other human rights and equality 
seeking groups, they are not exempt from being part of the hegemony of 
discrimination against 'others'."  (Barile, 2000)

Therefore, John, when you describe your understanding of this list as 
involving 'discussions relating to disabilities and research and thinking 
within that specific area'; I agree with you completely and this 'specific 
area' most definitely includes (or should include) issues of multiple 
minority status and experiences of layered oppression which queer disabled 
persons are all too familiar with.

In regard to your statement 'Unless we are going to suggest that 
homosexuality and marriage are disabling conditions, I am not sure that the 
current discussion is wholly appropriate'.--  "Homosexuals" experience very 
real "disabling conditions" on a daily basis at the hands of societies 
homophobic and heterosexist attitudes and actions.  Again, this fact is 
demonstrated within disability studies scholarship and disability community:

"Disability theorists ought to consider, therefore, how heterosexism and 
homophobia skew the design of research projects in disability studies."  
(Tremain,  2000)

"Building on the premises brought forth by the social model (Oliver 1990, 
1996) which positions the primary problems in the disabling society, the 
process can begin by reviewing how direct and indirect discrimination based 
on gender, race, class, sexual orientation and specific impairment that 
exists in the external social structure was transmitted into our movement 
creating exclusionary practices therein." (Barile, 2000)

In the case of Sharon Kowalski:  "One of the leaders in the disability rights 
community told me,  'We think Sharon's rights are being violated, but we 
can't afford to get involved in a gay rights issue'  (Thomson, quoted by 
O'Toole and Bregante, 1993)

Queer persons with disabilities experience invisibility within greater 
society...why should that be so amongst supposed comrades in disability 
community and within disability studies?  This invisibility is precisely the 
'disabling condition' that prompts my argument that this list serve is the 
appropriate and necessary place for a discussion of this kind.  

This post is not meant to be taken as hostile or deprecatory.  On the 
contrary, it is meant to raise awareness for the need of more inclusive 
research and practice within disability studies.  As a student in disability 
studies who is quite interested in this area, I have minimal resources to 
draw upon for my research.  Tremain, O'Toole, Corker, Shakespeare, Barile 
have contributed a tremendous amount, but it seems that the issue of 
queerness remains absent in much of the disability scholarship that is out 
there.   Hence my question for my critical literature analysis in Carol Gill 
and Joy Hammel's Disability 501 class....WHERE IS THE QUEER VOICE IN 
DISABILITY STUDIES??????        (Sorry about the oralist metaphor)

Respectfully,

Sharon P Smith
U of I at Chicago
Disability Studies PhD student


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