Dis/Abling Practices: Rethinking Disability
The paper discusses how ordinary acts of everyday life make up the complex and contingent scenarios of disabilities that create enabling and disabling (dis/abling) practices. Drawing on qualitative empirical data the societal visibility and relevance of dis/abling practices are analyzed by connecting disability studies and sociological ideas with insights from Science and Technology Studies (STS). The essay explores how (visual) dis/ability is the outcome of human and non-human configurations and suggests that dis/ability can be understood neither as an individual bodily impairment nor as a socially attributed disability. Rather, dis/ability refers to complex sets of heterogeneous practices that (re-) associate bodies, material objects, and technologies with sensory practices. These practices, the paper concludes, draw attention to the multiple processes that (re-) concatenate the conduct of human affairs.
- Standort
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Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
- Umfang
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Online-Ressource
- Sprache
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Englisch
- Erschienen in
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Dis/Abling Practices: Rethinking Disability ; volume:17 ; number:2 ; year:2007 ; pages:195-208 ; extent:14
Human affairs ; 17, Heft 2 (2007), 195-208 (gesamt 14)
- Urheber
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Schillmeier, Michael
- DOI
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10.2478/v10023-007-0017-6
- URN
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urn:nbn:de:101:1-2404281550333.456755116317
- Rechteinformation
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Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
- Letzte Aktualisierung
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14.08.2025, 10:49 MESZ
Datenpartner
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Beteiligte
- Schillmeier, Michael