2017 Fordham Distinguished Lecture on Disability
Speakers: Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp
“Disability Publics: Toward a History of Possible Futures”
Thursday, April 27, 2017
Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp, professors of Anthropology at NYU and founders of the Council for the Study of Disability, have been writing together on the intersection of reproduction, disability, and activism for more than 20 years. They are currently writing a book entitled Disability Worlds: Cripping the New Normal in 21st Century America.
Description of the talk: We have been conducting research in New York City across a variety of sites where the presence of disability is dramatically increasing and transforming consciousness regarding this form of human variation in locations as diverse as schools, medical laboratories, film festivals, homes, and religious institutions. We have learned how families form new kinship imaginaries around the fact of disability and how disability publics emerge through a variety of media forms and art activists. Our talk also addresses questions of demographics and futurity that we have encountered in our work. The number of disabled citizens, currently estimated at almost 20% of the US population, is predicted to increase significantly over the next decade, both as an expanding portion of the population and a growing absolute number. Given the inevitable increase in disability across the life cycle, we highlight that what some disability scholars/activists call "accessible futures” will remain under constant negotiation. At the same time, the initiatives of people with disabilities and their supporters are changing the face of both public and private culture, and most importantly, the shape of future imaginaries in which disability is understood as a central aspect of the human condition. We conclude by asking how these changing disability publics played a role in the 2016 American Presidential election.