Homework help

n123
FEM2104Week2.pptx

FEM2104: Gender, Disability, and Health

Week 2: Disability Justice and Britney Spears

Disability is socially constructed

Who defines what qualifies as disability?

Like race or gender, disability is socially constructed

Without disability, there would be no “normal” body

Every body has limitations;

I can’t fly

I can’t read an entire book in an hour

I can’t reach the top shelf of the kitchen cupboard

Disability as a social identity

Reclaiming “Cripple” or “Crip” as a point of pride

Disability culture as its own culture

Disability becomes intertwined with other forms of identity, like gender, race, sexuality, and class

Disability Rights models

Disability Studies as a field grew out of the activism for disability rights that culminated in the 1990 passing of the American Disability Act (ADA)

However, even 31 years after the ADA passed, ableism still exists in America

Recently, Canada passed the Accessible Canada Act (2019)

However, ableism didn’t disappear in Canada

Are Rights enough?

Many disability activists have argued that rights frameworks are limiting because they require individuals to claim their rights

Rights frameworks also depend on states to help the marginalized, erasing those marginalized by the state

Rights frameworks are also limiting because they depend on single-axis understandings of identity: i.e. intersectionality is rarely integrated into legal/rights-based frameworks of liberation

Quick definition of intersectionality

Coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, a Black feminist legal theorist

Examines the overlapping realities of systems of oppression like how ableism depends on sexism, depends on racism, depends on cissexism and heterosexism… etc.

Disability Justice

Challenges and expands on rights-based models

Focused on collective liberation and intersectional identity

Connects ableism to other systems of oppression (like sexism, racism, cissexism, heterosexism, etc.)

Recognizes that we all have limitations in our bodies

10 tenets of Disability Justice (according to Sins Invalid, pg. 26-29)

Intersectionality

Leadership of those most impacted

Anti-capitalist politic

Cross-movement Solidarity

Recognizing Wholeness

Sustainability

Commitment to Cross-Disability Solidarity

Interdependence

Collective Access

Collective Liberation

Britney Spears

Under conservatorship since 2008

Initially in 2008, Britney was found incompetent at making decisions

All major decisions are now made by her conservators, including financial, health, and relationship decisions

Recently, Britney came before a court to try to cancel the conservatorship, arguing that she wants it to end without another psychiatric evaluation

Britney Spears (continued)

Jamie Spears, Britney’s father, agreed on August 12 to “step down when the time is right,” remaining her main conservator.

Conservatorships are in place for the best interests of the person under the conservatorship; who knows better than what is in her best interest than Britney herself?

Your first assignment: Disability Justice and Britney Spears

What is Disability Justice?

Why is Disability Justice necessary when considering Britney Spears’s case?

How does Britney Spears’s case compare to the experiences of other disabled people?

500-750 words (please do not go over 750 words) to answer these questions

Due: October 15 at 11:59pm