Routledge
304 pages | 6 B/W Illus.
The fields of Critical Disability Studies and Critical Animal Studies are growing rapidly, but how do the implications of these endeavours intersect? Disability and Animality: Crip Perspectives in Critical Animal Studies explores some of the ways that the oppression of more-than-human animals and disabled humans are interconnected.
Composed of thirteen chapters by an international team of specialists plus a Foreword by Lori Gruen, the book is divided into four themes:
This book will be of interest to undergraduate and postgraduate students, as well as postdoctoral scholars, interested in Animal Studies, Disability Studies, Mad Studies, philosophy, and literary analysis. It will also appeal to those interested in the relationships between speciesism, ableism, saneism, and racism in animal agriculture, culture, built environments, and ethics.
Foreword by Lori Gruen
Introduction by Chloë Taylor, Stephanie Jenkins, and Kelly Struthers Montford
Part I: Intersections of Ableism and Speciesism
1. Animal Crips
Sunaura Taylor
2. Productive Bodies: How Neoliberalism Makes and Unmakes Disability in Human and Non-human Animals
Kelly Somers and Karen Soldatic
3. Zoos, Circuses and Freak Shows: A Cross-Movement Analysis
Sammy Jo Johnson
4. Disability and the Ahuman: A Story about a Dog, a Duck, and the Woman who Cared for Them
Agnes Trzak
Part II: Thinking Animality and Disability together in Political and Moral Theory
5. Against Performance Criteria
Stephanie Jenkins
6. Service Dogs: Between Animal Studies and Disability Studies
Kelly Oliver
7. Veganism as Universal Design: Accommodation and Inclusion in Law and Social Justice Praxis
Chloë Taylor and Kelly Struthers Montford
Part III: Neurodiversity and Critical Animal Studies
8. Lost in Translation: Temple Grandin, Humane Meat, and The Myth of Consent
Vasile Stǎnescu and Debs Stǎnescu
9. Disrupting Temple Grandin: Resisting a ‘Humane’ Face for Autistic and Animal Oppression
Vittoria Lion
10. Cripping Mad Cow Disease
Hallie Abelman
Part IV: Melancholy, Madness, and Misfits
11. Vegan Madness: Han Kang’s The Vegetarian
Chloë Taylor
12. ‘There, there’: Disability, Animality, and the Allegory of Elizabeth Costello
A. Marie Houser
13. Of Gimps, Gastropods and Grief: Feminist New Materialist Reflections on Elizabeth Tova Bailey’s The Sound of a Wild Snail Eating
Chloë Taylor