Preface
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1. Exploring Disability and Sexuality
Chapter 2. Theorising Disabled Sexualities: Constraints and Possibilities
Chapter 3. Reflections on the Process of Researching Disabled People’s Sexual Lives
Chapter 4. "Can you have sex?" Intimate Citizens and Intimate Selves
Chapter 5. "I need to stick with this because I might not find anybody else": The Labour of Love
Chapter 6. "If I ever wanted an affair I’d have to send my lover to lifting and handling classes first!" Sexual Normativity and Othered Bodies
Chapter 7. "…They finish off with a blow job": Politics, Power and the Precarity of Pleasure
Chapter 8. Drawing Some Conclusions
Index
Biography
Kirsty Liddiard is a Research Fellow in the School of Education at the University of Sheffield, where she also co-leads the Institute for the Study of the Human (iHuman).
'This book brings a much-needed critical disability studies lens to stories of intimacy, affection, care, eroticism, desire and love in the lives of dis/abled people. The author’s position as a researcher, scholar and disabled woman shapes the inquiry, but participant voices are brought to the fore. These voices challenge the ‘sexual normalcy’ that haunts the lives of dis/abled people, and offer, instead, possibilities for an affirmative sexual selfhood – outside the shadow of the ‘norm’. A must read for everyone with an interest in the fields of sexuality and disability.' - Katherine Runswick-Cole, Professor of Critical Disability Studies & Psychology, Manchester Metropolitan University
'Weaving together theory with rich, empirical data, in this book Liddiard makes clear the importance of taking seriously disabled people's stories of their sexual and intimate lives. The clear, careful and attentive thesis means it is a must read for those engaged in the politics of disability and/or sexuality.' - Jen Slater, Reader in Disability Studies and Education, Sheffield Hallam University






