ABSTRACT

Collecting together essays written by an international set of contributors, this book provides an important contribution to the emerging field of disability history. It explores changes in understandings of deformity and disability between the sixteenth and twentieth centuries, and reveal the ways in which different societies have conceptualised the normal and the pathological.

Through a variety of case studies including: early modern birth defects, homosexuality, smallpox scarring, vaccination, orthopaedics, deaf education, eugenics, mental deficiency, and the experiences of psychologically scarred military veterans, this book provides new perspectives on the history of physical, sensory and intellectual anomaly.

Examining changes over five centuries, it charts how disability was delineated from other forms of deformity and disfigurement by a clearer medical perspective. Essays shed light on the experiences of oppressed minorities often hidden from mainstream history, but also demonstrate the importance of discourses of disability and deformity as key cultural signifiers which disclose broader systems of power and authority, citizenship and exclusion.

The diverse nature of the material in this book will make it relevant to scholars interested in cultural, literary, social and political, as well as medical, history.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

Approaching anomalous bodies 1

part I|78 pages

Disability and deformity

chapter 1|20 pages

Representing physical difference

The materiality of the monstrous

chapter 2|17 pages

‘When a disease it selfe doth Cromwel it’

The rhetoric of smallpox at the Restoration

chapter 3|23 pages

Plague spots

chapter 4|16 pages

‘Wonderful Effects!!!’

Graphic satires of vaccination in the first decade of the nineteenth century

part II|95 pages

Controlling disabled bodies

chapter 5|20 pages

Disciplining disabled bodies

The development of orthopaedic medicine in Britain, c.1800–1939

chapter 6|9 pages

Making deaf children talk

Changes in educational policy towards the deaf in the French Third Republic

chapter 8|19 pages

‘Human dregs at the bottom of our national vats’

The interwar debate on sterilization of the mentally deficient 1

chapter 9|14 pages

‘That bastard's following me!’

Mentally ill Australian veterans struggling to maintain control

chapter 10|15 pages

Afterword – regulated bodies

Disability studies and the controlling professions