

The representation of intellectual disability: a “failed mimesis”? The system of primogeniture and Conrad’s chronic illnessġ0 “Of wonderful use to everyone”: Disability and the marriage plot in the nineteenth-century novelġ1 Afro-modernism and black disability studiesĬaregiving and exploitation in Langston Hughes’s “Berry”ġ2 “What’s the matter with him?”: Intellectual disability, Jewishness, and stereotype in Bernard Malamud’s “Idiots First” Lemuel Gulliver, cognitive ableist par excellenceĩ Crip gothic: Affiliations of disability and queerness in Horace Walpole’s The Castle of Otranto (1764) Horror hackery: Cherie Priest’s Maplecroft (2014)Įrasure pleasures: Matthea Harvey and Amy Jean Porter’s Of Lamb (2011)Ĩ From “changelings” to “libtards”: Intellectual disability in the eighteenth century and beyondĭaniel Defoe’s Mere Nature Delineated and Frances Burney’s Camilla New entrances into the asylum: Victor LaValle’s The Devil in Silver (2012)

Vampires, live burial, and flesh-made clothħ Contemporary horror and disability: Adaptations and active readersĬthulhu and Crip Time: Dreamland Theater: “The Language of Time” (2017) Stigmaphilia in a minor key: uses of the Gothic The perils of a Gothic mode in disability representation Theory and praxis of writing ASL in English literatureĥ “Here there be monsters”: Mapping novel representations of the relationship between disability and monstrosity in recent grapĦ Spectrality, strangeness, and stigmaphilia: Gothic and critical disability studies Phonocentric norms and the disconstruction of sign languageīreaking English: reclaiming and remaking literature Introduction to The Routledge Companion to Literature and DisabilityĬritical intersections and entanglements: the structure of the bookĢ Disability in black speculative fictionĪpproaches to analyzing disability in black speculative fictionģ t4t: Toward a crip ethics of trans literary criticismĤ Challenging phonocentrism: Writing signs and bilingual Deaf literatures
