Abstract
This article explores written narratives produced by two ‘abled’ people about a social encounter, or event, with a ‘disabled’ person in an inland Chinese city. To interpret these, I draw upon principles and approaches associated with narrative inquiry, critical disability studies and geographies of disability. I identify the structural elements, sequentiality, and themes (e.g. fear, pity and especially anxiety, or perplexity) permeating these narratives as well as their lack of resolution, or closure. Later, I situate these narratives within wider discursive contexts albeit while emphasising how perplexity emerges through a lack of identity, or rupture, between words and the world. These troubling and perplexing narratives register the fragility of symbolic systems and the troubled subject positions these enable/disable. Nevertheless, and crucially, these narratives also trouble the taken-for-grantedness of ostensibly stable abled/disabled categories, persons, and objects, in ways which may permit realisation of things outside reductive hierarchical binaries.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 1-20 |
| Journal | Disability & Society |
| Volume | 40 |
| Issue number | 1 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 6 Nov 2023 |
Keywords
- Critical disability studies
- Defrosting/perplexity
- Dis/ability
- Geographies of disability
- Narrative (inquiry)
- Non-identity thinking
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