Ronald Berger provides students with a comprehensive, accessible introduction to the key themes and controversies in disability studies. This innovative • provides historical context, from ancient times to the present • traces disability's impact throughout the life course • gives prominence to the voices of people with disabilities • explores popular culture’s role in distorting ideas about disability • addresses emerging ethical issues, such as the implications of genetic selection. Illustrating the profound consequences of differing conceptions of physical, sensory, and cognitive impairments, Berger provides a solid foundation for making sense of disability as a social phenomenon.
Invaluable introductory resource. Put a lot of things into perspective and furnished me with a crucial vocabulary with which to contextualize my life and many of my experiences.
A lot to be said for the lucidity of this reading, which takes one through a very solid overview of the main topics of disability studies and satisfies the expectations set up by the title well. I suppose, however, that I would have liked to see more of the theories/arguments explicated than to see the wide variety of (sometimes) repeated examples. However, the bibliography is complete and making use of this helps balance out that deficiency.