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(2012) Disability and social theory, Dordrecht, Springer.

The body as the problem of individuality

a phenomenological disability studies approach

Tanya Titchkosky, Rod Michalko

pp. 127-142

Disability, as Paul Abberley (1998: 93) reminds us, is interesting often only as a problem. Or as Bill Hughes (2007: 673) puts it, "almost by definition, [we] assume disability to be ontologically problematic, and many disabled people feel that many of the people with whom they interact in everyday situations treat them as if they are invisible, repulsive or "not all there"'. What interests us from a phenomenological perspective is that the contemporary scene of disability framed as "problem' typically generates the requirement for explanation and amelioration, but little else. Thus, this chapter examines the hegemonic taken-for-granted character of the disability-as-a-problem frame.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1057/9781137023001_8

Full citation:

Titchkosky, , Michalko, (2012)., The body as the problem of individuality: a phenomenological disability studies approach, in D. Goodley, B. Hughes & L. Davis (eds.), Disability and social theory, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 127-142.

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