1st Edition

Towards a Contextual Psychology of Disablism

By Brian Watermeyer Copyright 2013
258 Pages
by Routledge

258 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

In recent years, disability studies has been driven by a model of disability which focuses on the social and economic oppression of disabled people. Although an important counterbalance to a pathologising medical model, the social model risks presenting an impoverished and disembodied view of disability, one that ignores the psychological nature of oppression and its effects. This innovative... Read more

Introduction  1. Cultural Othering and Material Deprivation  2. Theorising Disability: The Body, Ideology and Society  3. Psychoanalysis and Disability Studies: An Unlikely Alliance  4. Bioethics, Disability and The Quality of Life Debate  5. Exploring the Cultural Shaping of Socialization: The Psychological Positioning of Disabled Lives  6. Oppression, Psychology and Change: Initial Conceptual Reflections  7. Conceptualising the Psychological Predicaments of Disablism: Disability, Silence and Trauma  8. Disability and the Distortion of Personal and Psychic Boundaries  9. Disability and Loss  10. Concluding Reflections

Biography

Brian Watermeyer is a clinical psychologist, and a disabled person. During the writing of this book he was a postdoctoral research fellow at Stellenbosch University. He teaches on postgraduate programmes at several South African universities, in disability studies, rehabilitation science, clinical psychology and other health science disciplines.