Reviews
THE SHELF

Reading into Disability: A List

INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITY 2020

Notions of "able" bodies and "differently abled" bodies are subjective categories that we, as a society, have drawn across our communities. The books in this list offer stories and insight into how one can better understand the experiences of persons with disabilities, and how the world can create a more inclusive environment. 

 

DISABILITY VISIBILITY: First person stories from the 21st century

(Vintage Books, 2020)

Alice Wong

Non-Fiction

 

A series of personal essays by authors, artists, activists, lawyers, and politicians with disability explores the modern day experience of disability through the lens of identity, pop culture, theatre, and social prejudices.

 

 

WHAT CAN A BODY DO? HOW WE MEET THE BUILT WORLD

(Riverhead Books, 2020)

Sara Hendren

Non-Fiction

 

In anecdotes drawn from working with people with disability, Sara Hendren describes how simple things like chairs, kitchens, street signs, and other elements of infrastructure can make sure that the world fits its inhabitants, instead of the other way around. Hendren points out cheap and sustainable models for such an endeavour, and offers critical insight into how the very definitions of normalcy that we depend on are subjective.

 

 

UNBROKEN: 13 stories starring disabled teens

(Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2018)

Marieke Nijkamp

Fiction

 

Twelve authors with disability write stories of friendship, love, war, travel, and more in this fiction anthology, all catered towards a young adult audience. The characters in each story reflect the author's respective experiences with physical or neuro-diverse disability.

 

 

THE COLLECTED SCHIZOPHRENIAS

(Gray Wolf Press, 2019)

Esmé Weijun Wang

Non-Fiction

 

Wang's essays—intimate in tone and scope—combine her sharp analysis with a personal experience of being diagnosed with schizophrenia. She discusses the medical community's struggles while labelling an illness, the limitations of institutions and higher education in dealing with PTSD and Lyme's disease, and her own jarring episodes with hallucinations. The book delves deep into the author's own psyche, and in the process offers readers a deeper understanding of the experience of mental conditions.

 

 

BODYMAP

(Mawenzi House Publishers, 2015)

Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

Poetry

 

The six sections of this poetry collection explore ableism, cultural imperialism, and anti-capitalism filtered through the lens of queer people of colour with disability.  The Sri Lankan poet devotes an entire chapter, "Crip World", to how society perceives mental illness and other forms of physical disability, and the injustices that become embedded in the social fabric because of repressed prejudices.

Comments

THE SHELF

Reading into Disability: A List

INTERNATIONAL DAY OF PERSONS WITH DISABILITY 2020

Notions of "able" bodies and "differently abled" bodies are subjective categories that we, as a society, have drawn across our communities. The books in this list offer stories and insight into how one can better understand the experiences of persons with disabilities, and how the world can create a more inclusive environment. 

 

DISABILITY VISIBILITY: First person stories from the 21st century

(Vintage Books, 2020)

Alice Wong

Non-Fiction

 

A series of personal essays by authors, artists, activists, lawyers, and politicians with disability explores the modern day experience of disability through the lens of identity, pop culture, theatre, and social prejudices.

 

 

WHAT CAN A BODY DO? HOW WE MEET THE BUILT WORLD

(Riverhead Books, 2020)

Sara Hendren

Non-Fiction

 

In anecdotes drawn from working with people with disability, Sara Hendren describes how simple things like chairs, kitchens, street signs, and other elements of infrastructure can make sure that the world fits its inhabitants, instead of the other way around. Hendren points out cheap and sustainable models for such an endeavour, and offers critical insight into how the very definitions of normalcy that we depend on are subjective.

 

 

UNBROKEN: 13 stories starring disabled teens

(Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2018)

Marieke Nijkamp

Fiction

 

Twelve authors with disability write stories of friendship, love, war, travel, and more in this fiction anthology, all catered towards a young adult audience. The characters in each story reflect the author's respective experiences with physical or neuro-diverse disability.

 

 

THE COLLECTED SCHIZOPHRENIAS

(Gray Wolf Press, 2019)

Esmé Weijun Wang

Non-Fiction

 

Wang's essays—intimate in tone and scope—combine her sharp analysis with a personal experience of being diagnosed with schizophrenia. She discusses the medical community's struggles while labelling an illness, the limitations of institutions and higher education in dealing with PTSD and Lyme's disease, and her own jarring episodes with hallucinations. The book delves deep into the author's own psyche, and in the process offers readers a deeper understanding of the experience of mental conditions.

 

 

BODYMAP

(Mawenzi House Publishers, 2015)

Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha

Poetry

 

The six sections of this poetry collection explore ableism, cultural imperialism, and anti-capitalism filtered through the lens of queer people of colour with disability.  The Sri Lankan poet devotes an entire chapter, "Crip World", to how society perceives mental illness and other forms of physical disability, and the injustices that become embedded in the social fabric because of repressed prejudices.

Comments

জাহাজভাঙা শিল্পের পরিবেশবান্ধবে ধীরগতি: ঝুঁকিতে শ্রমিক ও অর্থনীতি

জাহাজভাঙা শিল্পকে বিপজ্জনক ও দূষণ সৃষ্টিকারী হিসেবে গণ্য করা হয়। তাই এই শিল্পকে পরিবেশবান্ধব করা জরুরি। শুধু জরুরিই নয়, যেহেতু এই শিল্পকে পরিবেশবান্ধব করার সময়সীমা ঘনিয়ে আসছে, তাই একে অগ্রাধিকার...

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