Sex, Identity, Aesthetics: The Work of Tobin Siebers and Disability Studies

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The late Tobin Siebers was a pioneer of, and one of the most prominent thinkers in, the field of disability studies. His scholarship on sexual and intimate affiliations, the connections between structural location and coalitional politics, and the creative arts has shaped disability studies and continues to be widely cited. Sex, Identity, Aesthetics: The Work of Tobin Siebers and Disability Studies uses Siebers’ work as a launchpad for thinking about contemporary disability studies. The editors provide an overview of Siebers’ research to show how it has contributed to humanistic understandings of ability and disability along three key axes: sex, identity, and aesthetics. The first section of the book explores how disability provides a way for scholars to theorize a wider range of intimacies and relationalities, arguing that disabled people seek sexual access and revolution in ways that transgress heteronormative dictates on sexual propriety. The second part of the book works outward from Siebers’ work to looks at how disability broadens our concepts of social location and political affiliations. The final section examines how disability challenges traditional notions of artistic beauty and agency. Rather than being a strictly commemorative collection meant to mark the end of a major scholar’s career, this collection shows how Siebers’ foundational work in disability studies remains central to and continues to inspire scholars in the field today.

Author(s): Jina B. Kim, Joshua Kupetz, Crystal Yin Lie, Cynthia Wu
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Year: 2021

Language: English
Pages: 192
City: Ann Arbor

Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Reimagining Disability Studies | Jina B. Kim, Joshu a Kupetz, Crystal Yin Lie, and Cynthia Wu
Part I: Sex
1. Witnessing “Disability Experience on Trial”: Toward Critique and Emancipation | Allison Weiner Heinemann
Part II: Identity
2. It Depends: Academic Labor and the Materiality of the Body | Cynthia Wu
3. Cracks Filled with Images: Mental Disability, Trauma, and Crip Rhetoric in Cereus Blooms at Night | Jennifer Marchisotto
4. Ghosts of Disability in Naomi Shihab Nye’s Transfer | Therí A. Pickens
5. Crawling Upstairs: Identity and Ideology in Tobin Siebers’s Disability Theory | Thomas Abrams
Part III: Aesthetics
6. Words and Images: Networks of Relationality in Deaf, Blind, and DeafBlind Aesthetics | Rebecca Sanchez
7. Musical Modernism and Its Disability Aesthetics | Joseph N. Straus
8. Staging the Asylum: Javier Téllez’s Disability Aesthetics | Leon J. Hilton
9. Disability Aesthetics: A Pedagogy for Teaching a Revisionist Art History | Amanda Cachia
Contributors
Index