Title : | The Right Way to be Crippled and Naked : The Fiction of Disability | Material Type: | printed text | Authors: | Sheila Black, Editor ; Michael Northen, Editor ; Annabelle Hayse, Author | Publisher: | Cinco Puntos Press | Publication Date: | 2017 | ISBN (or other code): | 978-1-941026-35-9 | Languages : | English (eng) | Descriptors: | Disability/Ableism & Accessibility Fiction Porn & Erotic Lit Sex
| Abstract: | Welcome to the worlds of the disabled. The physically disabled. The mentally disabled. The emotionally disabled. What does that word "disabled" mean anyway? Is there a right way to be crippled? Editors Sheila Black and Michael Northen (co-editors of the highly praised anthology Beauty is a Verb: The New Poetry of Disability ) join newcomer Annabelle Hayse to present short stories by Dagoberto Gilb, Anne Finger, Stephen Kuusisto, Thom Jones, Lisa Gill, Floyd Skloot, and others. These authors - all who experience the "disability" they write about - crack open the cage of our culture's stereotypes. We look inside, and, through these people we thought broken, we uncover new ways of seeing and knowing. |
The Right Way to be Crippled and Naked : The Fiction of Disability [printed text] / Sheila Black, Editor ; Michael Northen, Editor ; Annabelle Hayse, Author . - [S.l.] : Cinco Puntos Press, 2017. ISBN : 978-1-941026-35-9 Languages : English ( eng) Descriptors: | Disability/Ableism & Accessibility Fiction Porn & Erotic Lit Sex
| Abstract: | Welcome to the worlds of the disabled. The physically disabled. The mentally disabled. The emotionally disabled. What does that word "disabled" mean anyway? Is there a right way to be crippled? Editors Sheila Black and Michael Northen (co-editors of the highly praised anthology Beauty is a Verb: The New Poetry of Disability ) join newcomer Annabelle Hayse to present short stories by Dagoberto Gilb, Anne Finger, Stephen Kuusisto, Thom Jones, Lisa Gill, Floyd Skloot, and others. These authors - all who experience the "disability" they write about - crack open the cage of our culture's stereotypes. We look inside, and, through these people we thought broken, we uncover new ways of seeing and knowing. |
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