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  • Cripping the Archive ? Disability, History, and Power: Disability, History, and Power

    Cripping the Archive ? Disability, History, and Power by Barclay, Jenifer L.; Hunt?kennedy, Stefanie; Virdi, Jaipreet;

    Disability, History, and Power

    Series: Disability Histories;

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      • Publisher's listprice EUR 86.00
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        36 481 Ft (34 744 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    36 481 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Edition number First Edition
    • Publisher MO ? University of Illinois Press
    • Date of Publication 5 August 2025
    • Number of Volumes Hardback

    • ISBN 9780252046698
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages424 pages
    • Size 235x156x15 mm
    • Weight 453 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 19 black & white photographs
    • 700

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    Long description:

    Cutting-edge methods for unearthing disability history

    How do we explain the conspicuous absence of disability from the histories we write? What forces and factors create this dynamic? How can disability be everywhere and nowhere, present and absent, and obvious and overlooked in both the historical record and historians’ interpretations of the past?

    Jenifer L. Barclay and Stefanie Hunt-Kennedy edit a collection of interdisciplinary essays that consider how and why physical, sensory, intellectual, and psychological disabilities are underrepresented, erased, or distorted in the historical record. The contributors draw on the methodology and practice of cripping to uncover disability in contested archives and explore ways to build inclusive archives accountable to, and centered on, disabled people and disability justice. Throughout, they show ableness informing the politics of the archive as a physical space, a discriminatory record, and a collection of silences.

    An essential contribution to research methods and disability justice, Cripping the Archive offers a blueprint for intersectional and interdisciplinary approaches that bridge disability studies, history, and archival studies.

    Cripping the Archive provides a cornucopia of diverse, provocative, astounding and often lesser-known case studies that showcase how centering disability in historical research, even in its obfuscation, minoritization, or absence, can be revelatory and productive.”—Liat Ben-Moshe, author of Decarcerating Disability: Deinstitutionalization and Prison Abolition

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