Sara Hendren
Goodreads Author
Born
Little Rock, AR, The United States
Website
Member Since
June 2012
URL
https://www.goodreads.com/sarahendren
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What Can a Body Do?: How We Meet the Built World
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published
2020
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6 editions
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Supra Systems
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published
2018
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* Note: these are all the books on Goodreads for this author. To add more, click here.
Sara’s Recent Updates
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Sara Hendren
liked
Benjamin Lipscomb's review
of
Crazy Like Us: The Globalization of the American Psyche:
"This is one of those reorienting, this-changes-everything books. Watters is no mental-health skeptic; but he makes a compelling case that the *expression* of various sorts of distress is culturally mediated to a high degree, with people tending to ma"
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Sara Hendren
liked
Erhardt Graeff's review
of
Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World:
"I really appreciated this counterpoint to the ubiquitous narratives exhorting deliberative practice / 10,000 hours / specialize early. This will change some of my parenting practices. It should also be used as another strong argument for liberal educ"
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"Light Perpetual is one of those great books that is even greater on re-reading. I've read some considered but uncomprehending reviews here, expecting and apparently wanting the book to be Sliding Doors or Life after Life--which it's not. The theme he"
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Sara Hendren
liked
M. Leona Godin's review
of
The Deepest Sense: A Cultural History of Touch (Studies in Sensory History):
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Sara Hendren
is now following
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“Disability gathers a dimensional we like nothing else, because disability is no more and no less than human needfulness, both personal and political. That's why the we that ties together this book is as tenuous as it is important: the collective that arises in the form of shared bodily vulnerability, the ways our physicality and our thriving are tied.”
― What Can a Body Do?: How We Meet the Built World
― What Can a Body Do?: How We Meet the Built World
“It was when Maya showed me the benches at Gallaudet University that I started to glimpse sound—the physical structure of it, the elastic bounce of its travel. My friends who are deaf have always told me that sound also belongs to them—that hearing people are forever getting it wrong to imagine deafness as a “silent world”—but the benches were the thing that made this idea vividly real. They were a feature in the design at the scale of rooms at Gallaudet, alongside a dozen other architectural choices that a hearing person could easily miss. Maya had paused for a moment in our campus tour to point them out, standing in the middle of a big, airy common space lined with windows on three sides, the lobby of a dorm where many students study and socialize, alone or in groups. The benches serve as seating for nearby wood tables, sets that are interspersed with soft fabric chairs arranged 360 degrees around for discussion. “Wood is the best material for this kind of group seating,” she told me, and mimed lightly slapping the wood with her palm. The resonance of wood makes it reverberate when struck. Students sometimes tap or slap nearby surfaces to get one another’s attention or to call a group to order, she said, and materials like concrete or thick plastics tend to absorb the sound rather than scatter it productively.”
― What Can a Body Do?
― What Can a Body Do?
“Instead of defining independence as “self-sufficiency,” the standard for independence in the clinical settings where they’d been treated as patients, they claimed that their independence would be understood instead as “self-determination.” The difference separated the dignity of authority and choice from the action itself. Asking for and receiving help with self-care tasks like buttoning a shirt, for example, was understood as a high degree of dependence in a rehabilitation paradigm. But if a person needed fifteen minutes of assistance with the shirt and with getting out the door to the bus, that person would be less dependent than a person who took two hours to dress on their own and could not leave the house. Uncoupling assistance from dependence—or perhaps bundling assistance together with a richer idea of independence—changed everything for these activists, because now they could press for a whole array of products and services that would support a desirable life. Judith Heumann, one of the instrumental voices for independent living, said in 1978 that “to us, independence does not mean doing things physically alone. It means being able to make independent decisions. It is a mind process not contingent on a normal body.”
― What Can a Body Do?
― What Can a Body Do?
“We want to be on the winning team, but at the risk of turning our backs on the losers, no, it is not worth it. So we fight the long defeat.”
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