ABSTRACT

Covering the period from Antiquity to Early Modernity, A Historical Sociology of Disability argues that disabled people have been treated in Western society as good to mistreat and – with the rise of Christianity – good to be good to. It examines the place and role of disabled people in the moral economy of the successive cultures that have constituted ‘Western civilisation’.

This book is the story of disability as it is imagined and re-imagined through the cultural lens of ableism. It is a story of invalidation; of the material habituations of culture and moral sentiment that paint pictures of disability as ‘what not to be’. The author examines the forces of moral regulation that fall violently in behind the dehumanising, ontological fait accompli of disability invalidation, and explores the ways in which the normate community conceived of, narrated and acted in relation to disability.

A Historical Sociology of Disability will be of interest to all scholars, students and activists working in the field of Disability Studies, as well as sociology, education, philosophy, theology and history. It will appeal to anyone who is interested in the past, present and future of the ‘last civil rights movement’.

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

part I|1 pages

Method and theory

chapter 1|29 pages

Thinking through disability history

An act of recovery

chapter 2|32 pages

Modelling disability theory

A contemporary history of the disability idea

part II|1 pages

Disability in history: Antiquity, the Middle Ages and Early Modernity

chapter 4|65 pages

Disability in ancient Greece and Rome

chapter 5|84 pages

Disability in the Christian Middle Ages

chapter 6|77 pages

Renaissance and Reformation

Disability invalidation in Early Modernity

chapter |11 pages

Conclusion

A banquet of indignities