1st Edition

Body Language Narrating illness and disability

Edited By G. Couser Copyright 2018
    160 Pages
    by Routledge

    158 Pages
    by Routledge

    As much as we may like to evade them, illness and disability inescapably attend human embodiment – we are all vulnerable subjects. So it might seem natural and inevitable that the most universal, most democratic, form of literature – autobiography – should address these common features of human experience. Yet for the most part, autobiographical writing expressive of illness and disability remained quite uncommon until the second half of the twentieth century, when it flourished concurrently with successive civil rights movements. Women’s liberation, with its signature manifesto Our Bodies Ourselves, supported the breast cancer narrative; the gay rights movement encouraged AIDS narrative in response to a deadly epidemic; and the disability rights movement stimulated a surge in narratives of various disabilities. Conversely, the narratives helped to advance the respective rights movements. Such writing, then, has been representative in two senses of the term: aesthetic (mimetic) and political (acting on behalf of). It has done, and continues to do, important cultural work.





    This volume explores this phenomenon using the latest critical theories and from the perspectives of patients and creative writers as well as academics. It attends to the problematic intersection of trauma and disability; it encompasses graphic narratives, essays, and diaries, as well as full-length memoirs; and it examines the ethical as well as the aesthetic dimensions of narrative. This book was originally published as a special issue of Life Writing.

    Introduction – Body Language: Illness, Disability, and Life Writing  1. The Illness Essay  2. View from the Sickroom: Virginia Woolf, Dorothy Wordsworth, and Writing Women’s Lives of Illness  3. Mindful Skin: Disability and the Ethics of Touch in Life Writing  4. Life Writing and Graphic Narratives  5. Interactions: Disability, Trauma, and the Autobiography  6. Life Writing and Dementia Care: A Project to Assist those ‘with Dementia’ to Tell their Stories  Reflections  7. ‘Ah, but I was so much older then, I’m younger than that now’: Cancer and a Virtual Relationship  8. ‘But That’s Just What You Can’t Do’: Personal Reflections on the Construction and Management of Identity Following a Late Diagnosis of Asperger Syndrome

    Biography

    G. Thomas Couser earned his B.A. in English at Dartmouth College, NH, USA, and his Ph.D. in American Studies at Brown University, RI, USA. He taught English and American Studies and founded and directed the Disability Studies Program at Hofstra University, NY, retiring in 2011.