ABSTRACT

Offering a current, comprehensive, and intersectional guide for students, practitioners, and researchers, this book synthesizes existing scholarship on culturally responsive practices that assist in exploring, understanding, and affirming the sexuality(ies) of disabled, chronically ill, neurodivergent, and Mad individuals.

Drawing on an intersectional framework, it integrates insights drawn from an interdisciplinary body of scholarship including psychology, social work, sociology, history, political science, women and gender studies, cultural studies, and education along with perspectives from the practitioners who are actively defining the next generation of best practices.

By highlighting the incredible resilience and resistance of disabled individuals’ and communities’ sexuality and sexual well-being, this book challenges narratives that rely primarily on a one-dimensional view derived from the medical model and the view of disability as something to be “fixed” – or at least tolerated – rather than celebrated. In a world that pathologizes and devalues the sexual existence of disabled individuals, it illustrates how to create thriving communities and relationships, and how they can organize to find their voice, providing a counter-narrative of empowerment that fosters hopefulness, power, and health.

It will be of interest to all scholars, students, and professionals across a variety of professions, including social work, psychology, counseling, policy, healthcare, education, community organizing, and multiple social service settings.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part One|51 pages

History and Community Work

chapter 2|19 pages

Able-Bodied Women Killing Disabled Babies

How Modern Narratives on Disability and Abortion Erase Disabled People From the Reproductive Justice Movement

chapter 3|15 pages

For Us, By Us

Mutual Aid Efforts in Disabled Queer and Trans Communities

part Two|90 pages

Exploring the Specifics

chapter 4|16 pages

Infinity and Rainbows

Supporting the Sexuality of Neurodivergent People

chapter 5|15 pages

Access Isn't Optional

Sexuality and Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities

chapter 7|16 pages

“Love Is Merely a Madness”

Sexuality and Madness in a Cisheteropatriarchal Culture

chapter 9|14 pages

No Spoons for Spooning

Navigating Sexuality, Chronic Illness, and Chronic Pain

part Three|94 pages

Diverse Types of Practice

chapter 11|17 pages

Exploring a Methodology of Care

Creating Research With Disabled Queer Individuals and Community

chapter 12|14 pages

Ready, Willing, and Able

Sexuality Education for Disabled Individuals

chapter 14|16 pages

Exploring the Intersections of Sex Work and Disability

What Helping Professionals Should Consider

chapter 15|17 pages

Resisting “Too Young”

Anti-Adultism in Disability and Sexual Health Justice Advocacy

part Four|135 pages

Across Intersecting Identities

chapter 16|18 pages

Racialization of Disability and Sexuality

A Historical and Contemporary Perspective Within the United States

chapter 18|16 pages

Trans Enough, Queer Enough, and Disabled Enough

Exploring Issues of Gatekeeping and Legitimacy of Trans, Queer, and Disabled Identities Through Sexuality

chapter 19|19 pages

We'll Make Our Own Space

Making LGBTQ+ Spaces Accessible

chapter 21|16 pages

Compulsory Monogamy Is Disabling

Connecting Disability Justice and Critical Non-Monogamy

chapter 22|15 pages

Caring for Disabled Kinksters

Context and Practical Guidance for Providers