Disability Pride Month
In many places in the US, July is recognized as Disability Pride Month. In part, it's held in honor of the passage of the American with Disabilities Act. It's also for recognizing and celebrating how disabled people are important and active participants in the world. These book selections privilege disabled writers, but is not made exclusively of disabled writers.
(Adopted from the NYPL Disability Pride page.)
Non-fiction
Being Heumann: an Unrepentant Memoir of a Disability Rights Activist by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2020-02-25One of the most influential disability rights activists in US history tells her personal story of fighting for the right to receive an education, have a job, and just be human. A story of fighting to belong in a world that wasn't built for all of us and of one woman's activism--from the streets of Brooklyn and San Francisco to inside the halls of Washington--Being Heumann recounts Judy Heumann's lifelong battle to achieve respect, acceptance, and inclusion in society.Black Disability Politics by
Call Number: Olin Library HV1568.2 .S35 2022Sami Schalk explores how issues of disability, broadly construed, have been and continue to be incorporated into Black activism, from the 1970s to the present. In so doing, she establishes a new lineage for disability politics, one that allows the work of contemporary Black disability justice activists to be central. Aiming to speak to both academic and activist audiences, Black Disability Politics identifies common qualities of Black disability politics and provides praxis-based approaches for enacting these politics in contemporary social justice work.Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice by
Call Number: Fine Arts and Olin Libraries: HV1568 .P54 2018Publication Date: 2018-10-30In their new, long-awaited collection of essays, Lambda Literary Award-winning writer and longtime disability justice activist and performance artist Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha explores the politics and realities of disability justice, a movement that centres the lives and leadership of sick and disabled queer, trans, Black, and brown people, with knowledge and gifts for all. Leah writes passionately and personally about creating spaces by and for sick and disabled queer people of colour, and creative "collective access" -- access not as a chore but as a collective responsibility and pleasure -- in our communities and political movements.Deaf and Disability Studies by
Call Number: Olin Library HV2380 .D25 2010Publication Date: 2010-07-31This collection presents 14 essays by renowned scholars on Deaf people, Deafhood, Deaf histories, and Deaf identity, but from different points of view on the Deaf/Disability compass. Editors Susan Burch and Alison Kafer have divided these works around three themes.Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-first Century by
Call Number: Olin Library HV1552.3 .D57 2020Publication Date: 2020-06-30One in five people in the United States lives with a disability. Some disabilities are visible, others less apparent--but all are underrepresented in media and popular culture. Activist Alice Wong brings together this urgent, galvanizing collection of contemporary essays by disabled people just in time for the thirtieth anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act,Dwarfism, Spatiality and Disabling Experiences by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2020-11-29This book provides an in-depth analysis of the social and spatial experiences of people with dwarfism, an impairment that results in a person being no taller than 4' 10". This book engages with the concept that dwarfism's most prominent feature - body size and shape - can form the basis of social discrimination and disadvantages within society. By ignoring body size as a disability, it is hard to see the resulting disabling consequences of the built environment. This book analyses how the relationship between harmful cultural stereotypes and space shapes everyday experiences of people with dwarfism and works to socially exclude them in diverse ways.Feminist, Queer, Crip by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2013-05-16In Feminist, Queer, Crip Alison Kafer imagines a different future for disability and disabled bodies. Challenging the ways in which ideas about the future and time have been deployed in the service of compulsory able-bodiedness and able-mindedness, Kafer rejects the idea of disability as a pre-determined limit.The Future Is Disabled: Prophecies, Love Notes, and Mourning Songs by
Call Number: Olin Library HV1568 .P5337 2022Publication Date: 2022-10-04Building on the work of their game-changing book Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice, Piepzna-Samarasinha writes about disability justice at the end of the world, documenting the many ways disabled people kept and are keeping each other - and the rest of the world - alive during Trump, fascism and the COVID-19 pandemic. Other subjects include crip interdependence, care and mutual aid in real life, disabled community building, and disabled art practice as survival and joy. Written over the course of two years of disabled isolation during the pandemic, this is a book of love letters to other disabled QTBIPOC (and those concerned about disability justice, the care crisis, and surviving the apocalypse); honour songs for kin who are gone; recipes for survival; questions and real talk about care, organizing, disabled families, and kin networks and communities; and wild brown disabled femme joy in the face of death. With passion and power,Haben: The DeafBlind Woman who Conquered Harvard Law by
Call Number: Law Library KF373.G567 A3 2019ISBN: 9781538728727Publication Date: 2019-08-06Haben defines disability as an opportunity for innovation. She learned non-visual techniques for everything from dancing salsa to handling an electric saw. She developed a text-to-braille communication system that created an exciting new way to connect with people. Haben pioneered her way through obstacles, graduated from Harvard Law, and now uses her talents to advocate for people with disabilities. Haben takes readers through a thrilling game of blind hide-and-seek in Louisiana, a treacherous climb up an iceberg in Alaska, and a magical moment with President Obama at The White House. Warm, funny, thoughtful, and uplifting, this captivating memoir is a testament to one woman's determination to find the keys to connection.Lavender clouds comics about neurodivergence and mental health by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2024A dazzling, humorous, and highly personal portrayal of neurodivergence from a leading voice in mental health comics. In Lavender Clouds, she translates her experiences with Autism, ADHD, and mental health into a series of colorful, emotionally resonant comics that tell stories of neurodiversity and resilience. With a tone that is sharp but always sensitive, this debut book collection describes the many insights and strategies the author has learned on her journey to self-acceptance. Among the many topics addressed in the book are the folly of "foolproof" organization strategies, the perils of burnout, the joy of small hopes, and the importance of growing at your own pace and on your own pathNeuroTribes: the Legacy of Autism and the Future of Neurodiversity by
Call Number: Uris Library RC553.A88 S54 2015ISBN: 9781583334676Publication Date: 2015-08-25A groundbreaking book that upends conventional thinking about autism and suggests a broader model for acceptance, understanding, and full participation in society for people who think differently. What is autism? A lifelong disability, or a naturally occurring form of cognitive difference akin to certain forms of genius? In truth, it is all of these things and more--and the future of our society depends on our understanding it.No Right to Be Idle: the Invention of Disability, 1840s-1930s by
Call Number: Olin Library HV1553 .R66 2017Publication Date: 2017-04-03During the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, Americans with all sorts of disabilities came to be labeled as "unproductive citizens." Before that, disabled people had contributed as they were able in homes, on farms, and in the wage labor market, reflecting the fact that Americans had long viewed productivity as a spectrum that varied by age, gender, and ability. But as Sarah F. Rose explains in No Right to Be Idle, a perfect storm of public policies, shifting family structures, and economic changes effectively barred workers with disabilities from mainstream workplaces and simultaneously cast disabled people as morally questionable dependents in need of permanent rehabilitation to achieve "self-care" and "self-support."Reading Sounds: Closed-Captioned Media and Popular Culture by
Call Number: Olin Library P93.5 .Z37 2015Publication Date: 2015-12-23Captioners must decide whether and how to describe background noises, accents, laughter, musical cues, and even silences. When captioners describe a sound--or choose to ignore it--they are applying their own subjective interpretations to otherwise objective noises, creating meaning that does not necessarily exist in the soundtrack or the script. Reading Sounds looks at closed-captioning as a potent source of meaning in rhetorical analysis.Sensory: Life on the Spectrum by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2022-10-18A colorful and eclectic comics anthology exploring a wide range of autistic experiences--from diagnosis journeys to finding community--from autistic contributors. Sensory: Life on the Spectrum contains illustrated explorations of everything from life pre-diagnosis to tips on how to explain autism to someone who isn't autistic, to suggestions for how to soothe yourself when you're feeling overstimulated.Unruly Bodies: Life Writing by Women with Disabilities by
Call Number: Olin Library HV1569.3.W65 M56 2007Publication Date: 2007-09-03The first critical study of personal narrative by women with disabilities, Unruly Bodies examines how contemporary writers use life writing to challenge cultural stereotypes about disability, gender, embodiment, and identity. Combining the analyses of disability and feminist theories, Susannah Mintz discusses the work of eight American autobiographers: Nancy Mairs, Lucy Grealy, Georgina Kleege, Connie Panzarino, Eli Clare, Anne Finger, Denise Sherer Jacobson, and May Sarton.
Fiction
(in)visible by
Call Number: Olin Library PG3950.12.A534 N4713 2022Publication Date: 2022-09-15Diagnosed with Tourette's syndrome as a teenager, Adam, now a 26-year-old freelance designer, attends his first meeting at a social support group. Here he meets Anna, a charity worker with a face hemangioma, Marta a TV anchor with alopecia, and Eva a make up artist with vitiligo. The following week he moves in with them."Defying Doomsday by
Call Number: Olin Library: PN6071.A78 D4 2016Publication Date: 2016-04-30Teens form an all-girl band in the face of an impending comet. A woman faces giant spiders to collect silk and protect her family. New friends take their radio show on the road in search of plague survivors. A man seeks love in a fading world. How would you survive the apocalypse? Defying Doomsday is an anthology of apocalypse fiction featuring disabled and chronically ill protagonists, proving it's not always the "fittest" who survive - it's the most tenacious, stubborn, enduring and innovative characters who have the best chance of adapting when everything is lost.Fortune Favors the Dead by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3619.P68 F67 2021Publication Date: 2021-08-03A wildly charming and fast-paced mystery written with all the panache of the hardboiled classics. It's 1942 and Willowjean "Will" Parker is a scrappy circus runaway whose knife-throwing skills have just saved the life of New York's best, and most unorthodox, private investigator, Lillian Pentecost. When the dapper detective summons Will a few days later, she doesn't expect to be offered a life-changing proposition: Lillian's multiple sclerosis means she can't keep up with her old case load alone, so she wants to hire Will to be her right-hand woman. In return, Will is to receive a salary, room and board, and training in Lillian's very particular art of investigation.How to Live Safely in a Science Fictional Universe by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3625.U15 H68 2010Publication Date: 2010-09-07Charles Yu delivers his debut novel, a razor-sharp, ridiculously funny, and utterly touching story of a son searching for his father . . . through quantum space-time. Minor Universe 31 is a vast story-space on the outskirts of fiction, where paradox fluctuates like the stock market, lonely sexbots beckon failed protagonists, and time travel is serious business. Every day, people get into time machines and try to do the one thing they should never do: change the past. That's where Charles Yu, time travel technician--part counselor, part gadget repair man--steps in.Islay: A Novel by
Call Number: ebookPublication Date: 2013-09-10Now, a new edition of the classic novel Islay promises to entertain a contemporary audience with its Deaf American dream first conceived by Douglas Bullard in 1986. Islay is the name of an imaginary island state coveted by Lyson Sulla, a Deaf man who is tired of feeling that "hearing think deaf means dumb, pat head." Sulla signs this to his wife Mary in explanation of his desire to tum Islay into a state solely for Deaf people, with himself as governor. From there, his peripatetic quest begins.One Two Three: a novel by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3606.R389 O54 2021Publication Date: 2021-06-08Everyone knows everyone in the tiny town of Bourne, but the Mitchell triplets are especially beloved. Mirabel is the smartest person anyone knows, and no one doubts it just because she can't speak. Monday is the town's purveyor of books now that the library's closed--tell her the book you think you want, and she'll pull the one you actually do from the microwave or her sock drawer. Mab's job is hardest of all: get good grades, get into college, get out of Bourne.Outcasts and Angels: the new anthology of deaf characters in literature by
Call Number: Olin Library Oversize PN56.5.H35 O98 2012 +Publication Date: 2012-09-20Edna Edith Sayers reflects these changes in her new collection Outcasts and Angels: The New Anthology of Deaf Characters in Literature. Her anthology introduces rare works by early masters such as Daniel Defoe. She includes three new deaf authors, Charlotte Elizabeth, Howard T. Hofsteater, and Douglas Bullard, who offer compelling evidence of the attitudes toward deaf people current in their eras. In search of commonalities and comparisons, Sayers reveals that the defining elements of deaf literary characters are fluid and subtly different beyond the predominant dueling stereotypes of preternaturally spiritual beings and thuggish troglodytes.Rebuilding Tomorrow by
Call Number: Olin Library PN6071.A78 R43 2020Publication Date: 2020-11-10In this follow-up to Defying Doomsday, disabled and chronically ill protagonists build new worlds from the remains of the old.Right Way to Be Crippled and Naked by
Call Number: Olin Library PS509.P58 R54 2017Publication Date: 2017-02-07"Welcome to the worlds of the disabled. The physically disabled. The mentally disabled. The emotionally disabled. What does that word "disabled" mean anyway? Is there a right way to be crippled? These authors--all who experience the "disability" they write about--crack open the cage of our culture's stereotypes."So Lucky by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3557.R48935 S67 2018Publication Date: 2018-05-15So Lucky is the sharp, surprising new novel by Nicola Griffith--the profoundly personal and emphatically political story of a confident woman forced to confront an unnerving new reality when in the space of a single week her wife leaves her and she is diagnosed with multiple sclerosis.True Biz by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3614.O929 T78 2022Publication Date: 2022-04-05"True biz? The students at the River Valley School for the Deaf just want to hook up, pass their history final, and have doctors, politicians, and their parents stop telling them what to do with their bodies. This is a story of sign language and lip-reading, cochlear implants and civil rights, isolation and injustice, first love and loss, and, above all, great persistence, daring, and joy."Turn of Mind by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3612.A6438 T87 2011bPublication Date: 2011-07-05Implicated in the murder of her best friend, Jennifer White, a brilliant retired surgeon with dementia, struggles with fractured memories of their complex relationship and wonders if she actually committed the crime.An Unkindness of Ghosts by
Call Number: Olin Library PS3619.O4373 U54 2017Publication Date: 2017-09-18Obsessive and withdrawn, Aster lives in the low-deck slums of the space vessel HSS Matilda. When the autopsy of the ship's sovereign reveals a link between his death and the suicide of Aster's mother, she begins sewing the seeds for civil war, and learns there may be a way off the ship if she's willing to fight for it.Wonderstruck: A Novel in Words and Pictures by
Call Number: Olin Library PZ7.S4654 Won 2011Publication Date: 2011-09-13Ben and Rose secretly wish their lives were different. Ben longs for the father he has never known. Rose dreams of a mysterious actress whose life she chronicles in a scrapbook. When Ben discovers a puzzling clue in his mother's room and Rose reads an enticing headline in the newspaper, both children set out alone on desperate quests to find what they are missing. Set fifty years apart, these two independent stories--Ben's told in words, Rose's in pictures--weave back and forth with mesmerizing symmetry.
Films
- Crip CampYouTube link, transcript and CC. On the heels of Woodstock, a group of teen campers are inspired to join the fight for disability civil rights.
- Crip Camp (Audio Description version)YouTube Link, transcript, CC and Audio Description. On the heels of Woodstock, a group of teen campers are inspired to join the fight for disability civil rights.
- Gerald (streaming video)In American Sign Language, with optional English subtitles. "This film traces the journey of a young man, Corey, who yearns for kinship. He discovers he has a deaf, autistic grandfather he has never met. Determined to make a connection with his grandfather, Corey uncovers family ties and secrets in a dramatic chain of events."
- See Us. Hear Us. Documentary Series"The See Us, Hear Us Campaign seeks to elevate the humanity, perspectives, and diversity of the millions of people in the US who cannot rely on speech alone to be heard and understood, regardless of disability or condition. Bias, stereotypes, and discrimination have led society to assume that not being able to speak means not being able to think. That mindset means most of us are denied access to robust, effective augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) tools and supports that would provide us agency and self-determination. With no way to communicate using language, we experience lifelong social isolation." Youtube videos with Open Captions
- Versa effect (streaming video)American Sign Language, no sound, with optional English subtitles. "Jackie and Seth have despised each other since they were kids. Now, as colleagues at a school for the Deaf in Texas, things haven't changed a bit. One day, they wake up only to find that they've switched bodies, much to their horror."
- Vital Signs: Crip Culture Talks Back (streaming media and DVD in ILR Library)Open-captioned. "Explores the politics of disability through the performances, debates and late-night conversations of activists at [This/Ability : An Interdisciplinary Conference on Disability and the Arts, held at The University of Michigan on May 19, 1995]. Featur[es] interviews with well-known disability rights advocates and artists, along with professors, students, and others with disabilities"