ABSTRACT

This interdisciplinary volume links dis/ability and agency by exploring LatDisCrit’s theory and activist emancipatory practice. It uses the author’s experiential and analytical views as a blind brown Latinx engaged scholar and activist from the global south living and struggling in the highly racialized global north context of the United States.

LatDisCrit integrates critically LatCrit and DisCrit which look at the interplay of race/ethnicity, diasporic cultures, historical sociopolitics and disability within multiple Latinx identities in mostly global north contexts, while incorporating global south epistemologies. Using intersectional analysis of key concepts through critical counterstories, following critical race theory methodological traditions, and engaging possible decoloniality treatments of material precarity and agency, this book emphasizes intersectionality’s complex underpinnings within and beyond Latinidades. Through a careful interplay of dis/ability identity and dis/ability rights/empowerment, the volume opens avenues for intersectional solidarity and spaces for radical transformational learning.

This book will be of interest to all scholars and students working in disability studies; intersectional disability justice activists; critical Latinx/Chicanx studies; critical geographies; intersectional political philosophy; and political and public sociology.

chapter 1|15 pages

Introducing Latinx identity

LatDisCrit’s radical alterity

chapter 2|8 pages

The normalizing fantasies of Habilitación and mundane rehabilitation dynamics

A global south metanarrative exploration

chapter 3|16 pages

LatDisCrit as radical exteriority and new materialisms

Bridging the decolonial power of global south and global epistemologies

chapter 4|6 pages

The betraying power of postcolonial rehabilitation

Beyond Fátima and Arturo

chapter 5|10 pages

LatDisCrit and blackness studies

Intersectional solidarity lessons from Edwina’s and Lidia’s counterstories

chapter 6|32 pages

LatDisCrit as an intersectional creeping decoloniality of blackness and indigeneity

Embodiment and subaltern transmodernities

chapter 7|18 pages

Jóvenes Progresistas?

A radical solidarity counterstory

chapter 8|10 pages

A postcolonial LatDisCrit leadership

Development counterstory: Diving into global north contours of subalternities and intersectional disability agency

chapter 9|13 pages

The power and perils of LatDisCrit’s situated emancipation

Bringing home lessons and forging possibilitarian intersectional disability agency paths

chapter |2 pages

Epilogue

Musings on global south distinctiveness and material precarities