Disability Rights as Civil Rights: a case study at the University of Illinois
Koh, Guangyong
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/13172
Description
Title
Disability Rights as Civil Rights: a case study at the University of Illinois
Author(s)
Koh, Guangyong
Issue Date
2008
Keyword(s)
Disability rights
Civil rights
2008 Fall
ENGL199
Series/Report Name or Number
ENGL 199, Introduction to Disability Studies in the Humanities, Prof. Catherine Prendergast: Disability Studies has emerged as a field of study across several disciplines of the humanities with the common orientation of challenging the notion that disability is primarily a medical fact. Instead, scholars of disability consider how notions of disability emerge and are sustained through cultural and social processes. The study of disability, in departing from the exclusively medical model, has forced new understandings of human diversity, dependency, ability, and inclusion. In this course, then, students read key texts from several humanistic disciplines that approach disability as a social designation of identity and an embodied experience. Through these key texts the class examined the history, culture, poetic representations, and civic work of people with disabilities. In coordination with the Ethnography of the University Initiative (EUI) students used the course readings in conjunction with the university archives to explore U of I’s history as an early site of disability activism. Students also had the opportunity to present their work at EUI’s cross-campus conference and publish their work in EUI’s digital repository of student work. Because it is in the spirit of both disability studies and EUI to conduct research that can improve institutional practice, the major project for this course was a research paper that concluded with recommendations for the Campus Honors Program on how it could be more accessible and inclusive to students with disabilities. The course syllabus is available at: http://www.eui.uiuc.edu/docs/syllabi/ENG199F08.pdf.
This collection examines ways in which the U.S. university and the American college experience are affected by diversity, and difference. In particular, these student projects examine experiences of diversity on campus, including important contemporary social, cultural, and political debates on equity and access to university resources.
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