Critical Social Thought 349BT - Race, Disability, and Illness

Fall
2017
01
4.00
Jina Kim
MW 02:40PM-03:55PM
Mount Holyoke College
101103
Shattuck Hall 203
jinakim@mtholyoke.edu
101284,101103
This course examines the intersections of race, disability, illness, and health using literature and culture as primary sites of engagement. Looking to writers like Audre Lorde, Anna Deavere Smith, Mia Mingus, Harriet Jacobs, and Indra Sinha, it asks how structures of racial, environmental, and economic inequity transform the category of disability, which critics have primarily defined in terms of whiteness. It also considers alternate conceptions of health--models that do not align with mandates of productivity or normative embodiment--offered by the texts under consideration, and asks what political/ social liberation might look like when able-bodiedness is no longer privileged.
Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.