1st Edition

If I Only Had a Brain Deconstructing Brain Injury

By Mark Sherry Copyright 2006
    256 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    256 Pages 2 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book offers a rich, insider's viewpoint of the lived experience of brain injury. Sherry, a survivor of brain injury himself, uses a cross-disciplinary theoretical approach (drawing upon the social and medical models of disability and combining them with lessons from feminism, queer theory, postcolonial and postmodern literature) to frame an enriching narrative about the lived experience of brain injury.

    LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES CHAPTER ONE: INTRODUCTION CHAPTER TWO: UNDERSTANDING THE IMPAIRMENT (ABI) CHAPTERTHREE: UNDERSTANDING THE DISABILITY CHAPTER FOUR: THE (IM)POSSIBILITIES OF INSIDER, EMANCIPATORY RESEARCH CHAPTER FIVE: OUR IMPAIRMENTS CHAPTER SIX: OUR EXPERIENCES OF DISABILITY CHAPTER SEVEN: DIFFEREND PERSPECTIVES CHAPTER EIGHT: CONCLUSIONS NOTES BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX

    Biography

    Mark Sherry, Endowed Chair of Disability Studies at The University of Toledo, is an internationally known researcher on disability issues - particularly brain injury and disability hate crimes. A keynote speaker many major conferences in Australia, New Zealand and the United States, Dr. Sherry has published in Disability and Society, The Review of Disability Studies and Disability Studies Quarterly.