- New Day Films
Transcription
- New Day Films
Disease Is Not A Metaphor by Cyree Jarelle Johnson Disease is not a metaphor for some crude and unnamed other. Disease is not capitalism, nor is it communism. Disease is not anarchy, nor is it the threat of anarchy. Except for when the body is chaotic and unknowable. Disease is not a virus in the system. Disease is not the body, not the whole, but a part. Disease is not a test from god. Disease is not a fiery furnace, a wall to climb over, a home to be lifted out of by rope. Disease is not a battle to be won or lost in death. Disease is not a metaphor. Disease is not hyperbole. Disease is neither metonym nor synonym. Disease is a condition of the body. Disease is a visitor. Disease is a backseat driver who climbs up front and takes the wheel. Illness is not a filigreed way to speak about things unpleasant and undesired, no matter how comfortable you may be with thinking of it in that way. You were not “crippled” by debts, nor “paralyzed” by fear, nor was your Thursday evening movie “lame”. You are not “blind” to the reality of the situation, nor “deaf” to the concerns of a close friend. You were re-entrenching able-bodied supremacy in language though, is there a specialized insult for that, taken from the lexicon of sorrow heaped upon people who are not yourself? No, there are not more important things to think about than words, because the things that you say are the substance of your thoughts, which become the things that you do and the biases you keep close to your chest. Neither disease, nor illness, nor disability is a convenient way to transmit your point into the bodies of those who would not listen otherwise. Disease is so rarely convenient. By invoking disease you have likely hit the point in their brains that monitors pity, fear, and disgust. If you are talking to me, it is the sector that should learn to better control rage. Disease is not for you to take on and cast off and diagnose yourself anew each morning. Disease is not for you to diagnose in the bodies of others, based on your novice opinion and ableist vision. Disease is not erased by the clever sidestep of euphemism. You cannot close your eyes and blink it away in hopes that we will die before you open them up again. You may utter the name of the disease loudly, I do not think it offensive. The body is not an apology for the disease. The body is not something to be looked at with eyes cast down and weeping. The body is not something to be viewed with the smug sense of knowing what health is. The body is not an apology for the disease. The body is not a manifestation of corporeal weakness and lack to be filled up by Jesus or God or the holy spirit. The body will not untwist itself, anti-virus itself, or cover itself up no matter how many prayer circles surround it, or altar calls it kneels before. The body is not something to feel sorry for because the body is not sorry. The body may be twisted and sly, but the body is not an apology. The body is not a mistake. The body is not a quirk. Not something to be aborted in utero because of preemptive pity and shame that you could produce such a body. The body is not something to be tested out of existence, or prepared for with good breeding. The body is not something to be quarantined in sanitariums and put under the defacto house arrest of disgust. The body should not be killed with medication and medical middle managers who know best while no one cares that you are dying. The body is not something to be fought against or beaten in a race against oneself. The body is a beating, spreading thing, moving and touching even at rest. And the body is not miraculous or brave, even though it does so many things you think it shouldn’t be able to. And the body is not just like yours even though there are overlaps in desire and function. Sameness is not a prerequisite for solidarity. And you should care about it even if you have made conscious attempts to ignore our bodies, to look away, to avoid hospitals and the smell of home care. And you shouldn’t need an apology because the body is not wrong. Looking Back but Moving Forwar<l / 99 Chapter 6 Looking Back but Moving Forward. The Radieal Disability Model None ofthe models discussed so far have adequately addressed both disablism and disabled minds and hodies; rather, they focus either on the oppression we experience (social model) or on what the models define as our flawed bodies and/or minds (eugenic, medical and charity models). This final chapter discusses the radical model of disability, my proposal for bringing disability politics into a new wave. This framework, while based on the work ofa number of disabled activists and scholars (notably Clare, 1999; Davis, 1995,2002; Moore, 2002; Erickson, 2007; Epstein, 2009) as well as feminist, anti-racist, anti-capitalist and postmodern theory, is relatively new. Developed in organizing meetings and coffee shops in Toronto, it is my proposal for how we should move disabled people's movements forward and how anyone concerned with social justice should conceptualize disability.' It is also a call to action, for disabled people and non-disabled people alike, to organize inclusively for social justice and radical access. The radical model defines disability as a social construction used as an oppressive tool to penalize and stigmatize those of us who deviate from the (arbitrary) norm. Disabled people are not problems; we are diverse and offer important understandings of the world that should be celebrated rather than marginalized. There are four key concepts in the radical model. Firstly, disability is not separate from other forms of oppression; rather, it is interlocked with and overlaps them. Secondly, what is considered normal is arbitrary and requires deconstruction. Up until this point, all ofthe models ofdisability have failed to challenge the supremacy ofthe norm. Margrit Shildrick andJanet Price (1998: 236) have written, "A more radical politics ofdisability, then, would disruptthe norms of dis/abled identity... by exposing the failure of those norms to ever fully and finally contain a definitive standard:' Thirdly, the disabilitylabel is used to marginalize specific types ofpepple in order to obtain and maintain power; the classification of disabled is a pplitical determination, not a biological one. Disability is not about whether or not something is "wrong" with someone; it is about the classification of disability, which allows certain people to be marginalized and other people to both benefit from that marginalization and jnstify it, becanse the rest of ns are inferior. Lastly, acceSSibility cannot be addressed universally; rather it must be approached holistically. While the medical model presents disability as falling somewhere on a spectrum between full health and the absence of it, the radical model posits that, to borrow Foucault's (1969) concept, disability falls somewhere in a constellation. Like the constellations in the sky, disability is in constant flux and appears different depending on the positioning ofthe onlooker. This model rejects the social model's distinction between impairment and disability. To review: "impairment" is defined by the social model as functional limitations and "disability" as the oppression "imposed on top of our impairments" (UPIAS in Oliver 1996: 33). The radical model ofdisability rejects the notion that impairment is a biological reality. The radical model also posits that impairment and disability can necessarily be distinguished from each other. This model is not the social model of impairment - while the model has a strong focus on the social construction ofimpainnent it rejects the dichotomies created by the social model. In some times, places or cultures, having visions is viewed as wholly nega¥ tive, requiring the individual to undergo medical intervention, confinement, medication and!or forced electric shocks to the head. In other times, places or cultures, it is seen as a gift. Similarly, deafuess is understood to be a disability by the medical model but for some people this has been far from the case. For instance, in Martha's Vineyard around the turn ofthe last century "everyone ... spoke sign language;' according to Gale Huntington, who lived there at the time. The townspeople "didn't think anything about [Deaf people], they were just like everyone else" (in Groce 1985: 2). Deafness was perceived very differently and not as a disability in the way that it is in a community where most hearing people are unable to communicate with Deaf people. What is considered a disability depends on the context. Intersedionality A foundational component of the radical model is the idea of intersectionality: addreSSing multiple oppressions together and in conjunction with each other. The word "radical" is derived from the Latin, meaning "having roots:' A conceptualization ofdisability that did not include, at its base, the acknowledgment of and engagement with tbe interlocutory nature of oppressions could not be a radical model. Within disability theory, intersectionality is often ignored. For instance, disability studies have been called "white disability studies" (Bell 2010: 374), and the exclusion ofwomen in that discipline has already been documented. Eli 100 I Disability Politics and Theory Clare writes further on the lack ofintersectionality in radical disahility circles: Unfortunately, not many disability or nondisabled progressive groups engage in multi-issue thinking and organizing that deeply embeds disability politics into an agenda that includes race, class, gendlii'and sexuality. At an ADAPT demo recently, 1saw a flyer that read "You think prison is bad, try a nursing home:' In one simple slogan, disability activists advanced a hierarchy ofinstitutions and oppressions, defined disability as their sole focus, and revealed profound ignorance about the ways being locked up in prisons cause bone-crushing damage, particularly in communities of color. This slogan and the disability politics behind it leave little chance for making connections and addressing the daily complexities of folks who know the grief and outrage of both prisons and nursing homes. (2009: 12) Disabilitypolitics often re-establish whiteness, maleness, straightness and richness as the centre when challenging the marginality ofdisability. Similarly, when disability studies writers discuss other oppressions, they often do so as distinct phenomena in which different marginalities are compared (Vernon, 1996b; Bell, 2010). When oppressions are discussed in an intersectional road} it is commonly treated like a country road: two, and only two, separate paths meet at a wellsigned, easy-to-understand location. Typically, authors talk about disability and women (see Thomas, 1999; 2004a; 2004b; Rohrer, 2005; Wendell, 1989, 1996; Crow, 1996; Morris, 1991; Fine and Asch, 1988; Gill et a!., 1994; Hall 2002; Garland-Thomson, 1994), disability and class (see Stewart and Russell, 2001; Preece, 1996), disability and race (see Bell, 2010; Stubblefield, 2009; Stuart, 1994) and disability and queerness (see McRuer 2002, 2003a, 2003b; Clare, 2001; Sandahl, 2003). None of these lists is complete, and there are, of course, some important exceptions to the common practice ofover-simplifying intersectionality (Vernon, 1996a, 1999; Clare, 1999; Garland-Thompson, 2002, 2005; Emmett, 2006; Petersen, 2006; Sherry, 2007; Clare, 2009; Dossa, 2009; Mingus, 2011).' Intersectionality is a multi-lane highway with numerous roads meeting, crossing and merging in chaotic and complicated ways. There are all different kinds ofroads involved: paved and gravel roads, roads with shoulders and those without and roads with low speed limits, high speed limits and even no speed limits. There is no map. The mpst important feature of these intersections, though, is that they look very depending on your location. With respect to multiply opptessed people, Chris Bell (2010: 378) points out that their ethnicity and race are erased, "letting them he run over, forgotten:' Looking Baek but Moving Forward / 101 This is the case for many people with more than one marginality, yet disabled organizers and academics in the field of disability studies negate our complex identities. When disabled people are "run over" because our identities are omitted, it is no accident. These erasures occur for a number ofreasons: prejudice, ignorance and/ or an attempt to distance a group from others in order to better lay claim to privilege. Being real about intersectionality means working to keep people from being "run over," as Bell puts it. One way people get run over or left out occurs when some members ofthe disabled community talk about "disability culture:' "Cultnre" can be used in lots of ways and mean lots of different things. It is important, however for everyone to recognize that they are a part ofa culture. Sometimes white people don't acknowledge that they are a part of a culture because it is so pervasive and dominant that it can be hard for some people to recognize. When disabled people talk about disability culture it is importanl\f that they not erase the many cultures that many disabled people are a part oD Out from Uncler Disability It is highly problematic for disabled people to simply build a rights movement to access privilege; yet this has largely been the case in Canada and the United States. Equally problematic are groups ofpeople who are classified as disabled working to take themselves out from under the disability umbrella in order to build a rights movement to access privilege. Many different groups that fall or have fallen under the disability umbrella have worked to separate themselves from the category of disability to their advantage and to the disadvantage of those they leave behind. Since in the 1970s, Deaf people have fought to get out from under the disabled label (Baynton, 2002). According to A Journey into the Deaf-World by Lane, Hoffmeister and Bahan (1996: 232), "To be Deafis not a disability in Deaf culture, and most members of the Deaf-World see no disability in their way ofbeing:' Or, as MJ. Bienvenu has put it "We are proud of our language, culture and heritage. Disabled we are not!" (in Lane, 1995: 83). This statement not only works to separate Deaf people from the disabled identity, but it also implies that there is no pride in a disabled identity. Psychiatric survivor activists have been working to unaffiliate with the disabled community. This movement has asserted that there is nothing wrong with psychiatrized people and, therefore, they are not Gifford aIld Harrison argue in Speaking Our Minds that this is because they understand label as being imposed from above by mlRllcaI prore;;;;;nars: Many psychiatric system survivors are unwilling to see themselves Lo"klngllack but Moving Forward/103 102/ Disability Politics and Theory as disabled. They associate disability with the medicalization of their distress and experience. They reject the biological and genetic explana. tions oftheir distress imposed by medical experts. They may not see themselves as emotionally or mentally distressed either, but celebrate their difference and their particular perceptions. (1996: 209) Trans and other psychiatrized people, aloug with Deaf people, have set out to counter the stigma attached to disability and to build a rights movement by arguing that there is nothing wrong with them; ergo, they are not disabled. Trans people argue that there is nothing wroug with them, they experience their bodies and genders in ways that do not align with so·called biological standards; psychiatric survivors argue that there is nothiug wrong with them Because many psychiatric survivors and mad pride organizers have disablist because they experience or are perceived to experience the world differently; assumptions about disability and disabled people, they frequently argue that they are not a part of the disahled community. Additionally, a number of the campaigns against forced drugging and EeT invoke disablist arguments to ad· vance their case (Withers, 2010). Psychiatric survivors have problematized the medical model as it applies only to them, identifying it as abusive and a tool for Deaf people argue that there is nothing wrong with them because they are a linguistic minority These arguments do not contradict the radical disability model whatsoever. However, with Deaf, trans aud psychiatrized people saying that they are not disabled because there is nothing wrong with them, theywork to reinforce the idea that there is something wrong with those disabled people they are trying to distance themselves from. While Deaf, trans and psychiatrized people are working toward becoming non·disabled, other groups have been far more successful. As already discussed, women were classified as unfit or disabled during the eugenic era. Feminists fought for women's rights and iu doing so worked to construct themselves as nondisabled, reinforcing the oppression of those they left behind. Many feminists have perpetuated the construction ofwomen as strong) non-disabled people, saying things like, "Female physical frailty is not a reality but a myth with au agenda" (Dowliug, 2000: 213). Racialized people have also worked to distance themselves from disability. Erevelles, Kanga and Middleton (2006: 78.79) have writteu about some critical race thinkers who "have actively sought to distance race from any associations with disability because they have recognized that this association has been used to justify the brutality of slavery, colonialism, neocolonialism and the continued exploitation ofpeople ofcolor." 'Ihe.Qisability label has been used in waYSj!g<tillIDaci'lliz"d.!'.";;;;Te:However, the problem is not disabled people; rather, it is the disability label, and choosing uot to talk about it does nothing to disassemble the power structures that allow it to exist. Some anti-racists have also argued that it is "demeaning to racial groups" to conueet disability struggles to anti-racist struggles (Erevelles, Kanga and Middleton, 2006: 79).' Of course, this perspective is demeaning to disabled people and only works to strengthen the idea that we are separate and should remain separate. The mainstream gay rights movement 'Yas also succ"ssfllJ.illQeLl)jL<1".<:.I"s· slfu'd as While the medical industry had pathologized homosexual· social control in relation to the psychiatric aspects ofmedicine (Burstow and Weitz, 1988; Burstow, 2006), not to the other aspects of the medical model or the model as a whole. The trans (transgenderl transsexual, genderqueer et al.) community is a group of people that has been psychiatrized but, on an organizational level, does not work with psychiatric survivors to achieve non-disabled status. Rather than being protected on the grounds ofgender or sex, trans people have human rights protections in New York (and possibly other states) because "GlD [gender identity disorder] is a disability" under state law (Doe v. Bell, 2003: n.p.). Trans people are pathologized under the category of gender identity disorder (GlD); our identities are funnelled through medical "treatments:' This process is undermining, arduous and can be abusive (particularly with respect to children). Some trans activists are fighting for the removal of GIn from the DSM so transsexuality would no longer be a disability. DL.JCclly'-winten; (in G]P.Jlefu rm 1\ p".o.E!e]..=cQm:!iti not a is the saD'le ..<;ontilw"s: .'Pi!ference thereis no consensus on this point. The for dissent is the realization that many trans people are poor and canuot a!ford sex reassignment surgeries (and, to a lesser extent, hormones), which they would not have access to without the pathologization of the trans identity. As a disabled trans person, I believe the trans commuuity should adopt a radical disability perspective and view (other) disabled people as allies. 1think the trans community should fight for medical care without pathologization and use this discussion as a waj!;;",f challenging the medical system and the existing power structures that thrmedical system moulds its perspectives to. Nevertheless, there are mauy trans people fighting to take us (or those of us who areu't otherwise disabled) out from under the disability umbrella. ity and homosexuals out of hatred, ignorance and desire for social control) homosexuals looked to this sarne profession, and specifically to psychiatrists, to de·pathologize aud socially legitimize them. In the 1960s, organized gays 104 / Disability Politics and Theory and lesbians took an active role in fighting for change. One of the key aims of the struggle was to establish homosexuality as a minority group rather than a disability. The mainstream gay rights movement argued that the categorization ofdisability needed to become one of the key battlegrounds in the,;ights movement (Kameny, 2 0 0 9 ) . " " • The mainstream gay rights movement built itself through its separation away from other marginalities and its separation from the disability umbrella.' In establishing homosexuals as non-disabled, the movement actively organized against being defined as disabled, as well as being against those who defined homosexuals as disabled: the American Psychiatric Association (APA). The APA was the gatekeeper of all psychiatric diagnoses and had the power to un-psychiatrize homosexuality. This criticism was not of pathologization or the oppressive nature of the classification of disability in general, Simply that those in power had erred in classifying them as disabled. This strategy actually worked to maintain disablist oppression and the status quo while negotiating privileged homosexuals' co-optation. In 1973, the mainstream gay rights movement was successful in getting homosexuality de-listed as a psychiatric disability. Gay psychiatrist Charles Silverstein (2008: 272) called it "the most important achievement ofthe Gay Liberation Movement:' Out of this, a new "minority rights" movement was born. Homosexuals would no longer be forcibly confined, electro-shocked, drugged, lobotomized and subjected to other horrors Simply for being homosexual. Undoubtedly, this is an incredibly important victory in the history of gay rights and one I personally benefit from. However, it is important to examine it critically. It was a victory for many homosexuals at the time, but a lot ofhomosexuals were left behind. To be gay or lesbian is no longer to be pathological, as white, middle- and upper-class homosexuals and bisexuals (especially gay men) are considered to be productive and useful in contemporary society (particularly the "straight acting" gays or "strays"). The mainstream movement has rallied around assirrulationist issues like gay marriage, gays in the military (in the United States) and adoption that work to uphold capitalist values and social norms. This is done instead of, and at times at the expense of, organizing in defence Looking Back but Moving Forward /105 women members).5Racialized communities and women also sold out many members of their communities in order to access privilege by winning the status of non-disabled. Griffin Epstein (2009: 33) says that there is a "national mandate for the formerly marginalized to pick up the mantle ofthe oppressor in exchange for the rights and privileges ofcitizenship:' With respect to disability, all ofthese groups (women, racialized people, homosexuals, trans and other psychiatrized people and Deafpeople) have taken up that mantle in order to win reclassification as non-disabled. Those groups that have won a level ofmarginality that does not include being called disabled largely continue to uphold disablism and maintain separation from disabled people. Indeed, Davina Cooper (2009: 233) argues: "When one minority group tries to seek equality by breaking away from the stigtnaproduced by association with another group, the claim of equality can further naturalize the other minority group's alienation:' This act ofseparation often serves to reinforce the justifi.cation for the oppression ofthose left behind. Ofcourse, there are many disabled people who are also members ofthese groups that have been left behind in these definitional shifts. Beyond continuing to oppress other members ofthese marginalized groups, there are other reasons that make the struggle to reconstruct these groups as non-disabled problematic. Ofcourse, it is always problematic and disappointing (yet, almost predictable) for marginalized groups to participate in the oppression ofother marginalized groups. Rather than working in coalitions to challenge the systems that permit the characterization ofundesirable people as disabled, these groups have created space for their communities to be at perpetual risk ofbeing reclassified as disabled on other grounds as the needs of those in power shift. Threats of being placed back under the disability umbrella are real for racialized communities, women and homosexuals. Academics like Rushton andJensen have devoted their careers to proving the intellectual inferiority of, particularly, Blackpeople to build the case that they are disabled. The prospect of the re-pathologization ofwomen has recently become an issue because of prenatal sex selecti.on. Also, the discovery of a "gay gene," which is actively being sought, could lead to the re-pathologization ofhomosexuality. These are just some ofthe ways that these communities could be reclassified as disabled. of (or even actively marginaliZing) "deviant" queer lifestyles like polyamoury, Because components ofthese movements have worked to reinforce the idea sex work, transsexuality; transgenderism and gender queerness that challenge that disability (and by extension disabled people) is bad and undesirable, they will be left with few political options if they face re-pathologization. Further, these groups all share overlapping populations, so, racialized queer women are especially at risk ofbeing put back into the disability box. Adopting a radical model ofdisability, rather than trying to break out ofthe disability category, would problematize the entire disability labelling process, those values and norms. Many ofthese ways ofliving remain psychiatrized and are still considered disabilities. That said, there remains strong opposition on the political right to the The mainstream gay rights of"strays" into mainstream society. sold out its disabled members (not to mention its racialized and pOOf, trans, intersexed, two-spirited and, oftentimes, 106 / Disability Politics and Theory not jnst a few communities' membership within it. Snccessfully eliminating the systems that permit the creation of the category of disability would leave every member of all ofthese marginalized groups better off. Ofcourse) the reinforcing ofoppression in order to get out from un4e:r the disability label is only one way that marginalized groups work to uph'bfd !he oppression ofothers. There are countless examples ofwhen and how oppressed groups (including disabled people) have targeted or tried to oppress each other for rights and resources. 1his is because) according to Martin Banton and Gurnam Singh (2004: 113), "oppressed groups often succumb td' oppressive ideologies. One of the consequences of this is that the group "may seek to identify a position within the strata that is superior to as many other groups as possible:' When this happens, according to Banton and Sing, oppressed communities can act to "reinforc[e] the structures of oppression:' Disabled people are not immune to this phenomenon. Disability organiza· tions in Canada and the United States have frequently "picked up the mantle ofoppression" and allowed themselves to be co-opted, rather than build their struggles outward. There are numerous examples of those groups still well under the disability umbrella trying to distance themselves from others to gain privilege. Some physically disabled people were against advocating for the inclusion of people who were psychiatrized or intellectually disabled in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms because it could lower their chances for inclusion (Vanhala, 2011). There has also been a great deal of criticism of the disability rights movement for being dominated byphysically disabled people. There is also a Facebookgroup called "Being physically disabled does not automatically make us stupid." It tells people to "join this group and together we can make people change their attitudes towards us:' The attitudes that are being changed, though, are the disablist attitudes about others - and these attitudes are being reinforced. I have also seen physically disabled people who are the brunt ofdisablism say that they are smart or that they have a university degree to assert their worth. .• On the other hand, I know physically disabled people who have been the subjects of pity from intellectually disabled people who operate on the assumption that they have it so much worse. Manyintellectually disabled people identify as "people who have been labelled" (People First of Canada, 2006). The choice to refer to themselves as "people who have been labelled" without using the word "disabled" reinforces the idea that there is something negative about being disabled, while addressing the root ofthe problem, or the fact that the label exists, is out oftheir coiJ,trol. I think it is important to respect the way that people choose to identify. same time, I am critical ofthis choice as it seems to me to be rooted in disablism. Looking Back but Moving Forward / 107 This competitive oppression-building is also performed by disability organizations towards those groups that have moved outside ofthe category of disability. Just one example is how, in Canada and the United States, disabled organizations have fought for "accessible" public transit; but once ramps, lifts and automatic announcement systems have been put in place, they stop fighting. These organizations don't fight for free or affordable transit or an end to discrimination on public transit) to name but a few causes. 6 Movements for change cannot continue to replicate the models ofco-optation and oppression. Disability is not actually about those of us who are disabled; it is about" those with the power to call us disabled. Indeed, marginality is controlled by those who are not marginalized, which makes it very important to work collectivelyas oppressed groups to target that power. Further, one cannot choose to oulyfight disablism, as most disabled people experience more than one form ofmarginalization and) therefore) more than one form of oppression. This is why poverty, seXism, heteroseXism/homophobia, transphobia, racism and ageism must be fought in tandem. Internationally, most disabled people are racialized (New Internationalist, 200S; Parens et aI., 2009). In Canada, rates of disability are disproportionately high among First Nations people, racialized people and non-European recent immigrants (Raphael, 2007) .Also, most disabled people are women - they are more likely than men to report chronic conditions and disabilities (Federal, Provincial and Territorial Advisory Committee on Population Health, 1999; Raphael, 2007). Disabled people are far more likely to be poor than non-disabled people (Rosano et al., 2008; Raphael, 2007; oEeD, 2010). Many of us are queer and/or trans, and most of uS are seniors. Our multiple identities means that if we focused solely on disablism, much like aspects of the disability rights movement has done, then we are working to exclude the majority ofdisabled people from our struggle - people who would not be able to access the privileges that they would be able to access ifthey were not disabled. It is important not only to acknowledge the diversity within disabled commuuities, but also to actin solidaritywith othermovements. The disability rights and social models have largely failed to fight other oppressions and to work in solidarity with other marginalized groups and anti-oppression movements for change. Rather than fighting for our piece ofthe pie while working to enforce eXisting oppression on others, we need to bake a new pie. We have to build new models. To quote longtime activist Beric German (2009), "It cannot just be pie in the sky, it has to be pie that you can lOll! Disability Polities and Theory Normal, Biological and Political Constructions Disability, which includes impairment, is a social construct. In U.S. and Canadian societies, OUf disabilities are defined by those in power to their own advantage. WhoatlQ shiftsclepem!irlgon wh.\ltJ'.o",er d\et.ales.illte.tJ.tiJnes.withhroad, sweeping definitions in order to marginalize Peop-Ie. In this society, power and capitalism are intrinsically related. Those in power enable capitalism to function, and capitalism enables those in power _'"rto keep their power and obtain more of it. According to Sam Gindin (2002: n.p.), "Some people control the potential ofothers, control how that potential develops over time, privately appropriate the surplus created in social production, and apply that surplus to restructure work, communities, and future opportunities:' It is these elites that also control the definition ofwhat is normal and, therefore, what is disabled, in order to maintain and expand influence and control to their benefit. The definition ofdisability shifts as the needs ofthose in power shift: as economic and social needs change, so too does the tion ofwho is disabled. People who are disabled are labelled so because people with power say we are disabled. Since the advent of eugenics, one of the primary reasons we have been, and continue to be, categorized as disabled is because we are considered to be unproductive or under-productive in the capitalist system. In practice, capitalism is a system that is upheld by a number ofmyths. One ofthem is that white people are superior to racialized people. Another is that men are superior to women (also that there are only women and men as far as gender identities go and that those identities are fixed). Capitalism is not necessarily patriarchal and racist; however, the current form of capitalism that operates globally is inherentlypatriarchal and racist. All forms ofcapitalism, however, are innately oppressive and work to benefit the few at the expense ofthe many. Also, there is a myth that some people have power and wealth because they work hard and others are lazy and that there is one ideal that people must strive to achieve. In order to maintain our belief in the capitalist myths, they need to be SOcially imposed. Those of us who violate the goal of striving for the ideal (by choice or by our existence, as is the case with many disabled people) or who challenge our roles within the socio-economic system face consequences for our deviance. Sometimes these consequences are legal, such as forced confinement and "treatment" of many psychiatrized people, but more often they are economic and sociaL We are made into examplesj we are denied the resources, joys, comforts, jobs and pleasures that "normal" people have access to. We are then punished for our low by way of systemic discrimination, poverty, dehumanization, degend'ering7 and violence. This is the punishment used against us. Importantly, though, it is also a lesson for everyone else to Looking Back but Moving Forward / 109 do everything that they can (which is obviously out of their control) not to become like us. Under capitalism, individual productivity is linked to individual worth: the more you produce, the more money you make and the more valuable you are to society. As productivity and worth are measured entirely in monetary terms, people who are left out of the system, such as disabled people, are worthless. Ofcourse, most disabled people who are excluded from paid labour are left out because ofdiscrimination and inadequate workplace accommodation. Rather than arguing that disabled people can be productive in a capitalist paradigm, the radical model of disability sees capitalist values as problematic. People should not be valued by how much money we make, how much we produce or how much we contribute to an unsustainable and unjust economy. This is not a romantic or superficial point. TIlls is an important contribution that radical disability theory can make to radical politics today. Frequently, people who are organizing or agitating for social justice retain this core capitalist value. We often view other people's value through their contributions to the struggle, through how much work they do or how productive they are. If we truly want to create a just society, we must value people as people, not as producers. What is considered normal or nonMdisabled is constructed around certain kinds ofpeople, while leaving others out. Another myth that is firmly upheld is that disabled people are dependent and non-disabled people are independent. No one is actually independent. This is a myth perpetuated by disablism and driven by capitalism we are all actually interdependent. Chances are, disabled or not, you don't grow all of your food. Chances are, you didn't build the car, bike, wheelchair, subway, shoes or bus that transports you. Chances are you didn't construct your home. Chances are you didn't sew your clothing (or make the fabric and thread used to sew it). The difference between the needs that many disabled people have and the needs of people who are not . / labelled as disabled is that non-disabled people have had their dependencies, normalized. and call the .',,people who need those things independent, while other nee.gs areS9nsid_ered us Ot1;rs resources and to meet our needs. We are all inter4epef!dent. 1his ------ is ..E,art l:!?,:vever, disabled people areconstructed as dependent and deviant rather a£;:r;;;;;:;·;:;;;I:ifwe100katwhow"'''OflgmaIlY7:lassified as disabled under the first m-;;dern categorization of disability (eugenic theory) in Western society - poor people, women, homosexuals, racialized people, physically disabled people and intellectually disabled people - the links 110 / Disability Politics and Theory between unproductivity and the categorization ofdeviance and disability are apparent. While there are clear capitalist functions for the eugenic classifications of disability, it is important to recognize that the oppression that these groups experience is not rooted solely in capitalism. Sexism, heten)s!jXism/ J,,;" ., homophobia, disablism and racism all exist outside ofcapitalism, and it would be irresponsible to argne that replacing capitalism would alleviate all oppression. Legislative Definitions of Disability What is constructed as disability is informed by numerous forms ofoppression and has clearly changed over time. Even within a set period of time, however, Looking Back but Moving Forward / 111 litigate against businesses was dramatically reduced, which would limit potential liability. In order to permit fewer people the chance to access resources and accommodations, the ADA definition was made morc restrictive. An amend- ment introduced to the ADA in 2008 was designed to refocus the definition of disability. However, peope who need to use eyeglasses continue to be exempt from the Act (Leonard, 2009), and it remains to be seen what, if any, impact the changes will actually have. The ADA is complaint driven. Typically, an individual who has been discriminated against must have the time, energy and resources to engage in the court system to seek a remedy to the discrimination. In order to be successful, definitions change depending on the intended outcome. The greater amount people also need evidence that is often difficult or impossible to obtain. Also, of access to resources and rights a piece oflegislation involves, the stricter the litigation requires resources - resources that many people do not have access to; 'ho:wever} many property owners} businesses and corporations have ample resources to defend themselves in the courts. definition becomes. Upon the examination offour legal definitions ofdisability that are used in the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Supplementary Security Income (SSI) in the United States, and the Accessibilityfor Ontarians with Disabilities Act (AODA) and Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP) in Canada, the way that legislation and legal precedents influence social definitions of disability becomes clear. In the United States, one ofthe most widespread definitions of disability is outlined in the Americans with Disabilities Act (1990). The ADA defines disability as "a physical or mental impairment that snbstantially limits one or more major life activities ofsuch individual;' and/or having a "record of;' and/ or being "regarded" as, having an impairment. This definition was interesting because it diverged from the medical model, in part. It used a more rights/social model definition because it included people who were "regarded" as disabled. However, in 1999, the U.S. Supreme Court tightened the definition of disability under the ADA. People who had "easily correctable" disabilities like nearsightedness (with glasses) or high blood pressure (with medication) were no longer considered disabled. They were told, according to Michael Berube (2093: 54), that they "had no basis for a suit under the ADA precisely because their disabilities were easily correctable:' This meant people filing suit nnder the ADA were "too disabled to be hired but somehow not disabled enough to be covered by the ADA; or, to put it this way, plaintiffs' <easily correctable' disabilities were not so easily correctable as to allow them access to employment" (Berube, 2003: 54). The broad ADA definition ofdisability did not legallyprotect disabled people from discrimination because the U.S. Supreme.c:ourt found that 160 million people would be classified as disabled (54).1ft'ls number was considered too high, so the definition was shifted to accomm6date (wealthy) business owners rather than victims of disablist discrimination. The number of people that were able to Further, the ADA, like the other acts I will discuss in this section, qS>'csnothingto address and, while it appears to be broad and encompass a great number ofpeople, the actual number ofpeople who successfully pursue litigation is quite small. From July 1992 to September 2005 there were over 230,000 claims filed under the ADA for employment discrimination. Ofthese, roughly 33,000 (Jess than ] 5 percept) ended in favour ofthe complainant. Ouly 2.2 percent ofsuccessful claims were actually won through the courts, the rest were settled or otherwise resolved (Winegar, 2006). While this legislation has helped specific individuals remedy discrimination, its overall impact is nowhere near what is needed to undermine disablism in the United States. Canada does not have federal disability legislation that is comparable to the ADA. The Canadian Charter ofRights and Freedoms (1982) protects against government discrimination on the grounds of disability (which is undefined in the law). Additionally, each province has a human rights code that contains protections for disabled people. However, human rights law does not necessarily entail physical inaccessibility or lack ofinterpreters, for example. Like the ADA, however, this legislation is largely complaint driven. In Ontario, the country's most populated province, there is disabilityspecific legislation: the Ontarians with Disabilities Act (ODA) (2001). This law only requires governments to make accessibility plans, not actually to take action. In 2025, the ODA will be replaced by the Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act (2005) (AODA), a piece oflegislation much more similar to the Americans with Disabilities Act. The ODA and the AODA define disability as "any degree of physical disability, infirmity, malformation or disfigurement that is caused by bodily injury, birth defect or illness ... mental impairment or a developmental disability... a learning disability... [or] a mental disorder" 112/ Disability Politics and Theory (Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2001: 2. (1) (a); Accessibilityfor Ontarians with Disabilities Act, 2005: 2. (a)). This definition is incrediblybroad, but provides little meaningful assistance for disabled people. Additionally, the government has refused to enact section making it an offence to break this law, so it is essentially useless ofcourse to the governing partywho enacted the law, as they received extensive positive media coverage from its passage (Lepofsky, 2004). Where the benefit to disabled people is greater and has ameaningfulimpact on people's lives, the definition of disability becomes much more restrictive. Supplementary Security Income (United States) and the Ontario Disability Support Program provide (measly) montWy amounts to people on disability who are declared unahle to work. They both require medical documentation of conditions that are terminal or will last at least a year (Social Security Online, 2010; Ontario Disability Support Program Act, 1997). Disahility, in the case of Supplementary Security Income (SSI), must lead to an inability "to engage in any substantial gainful activity" (Social Security Online, 2010), which to the American government means productive, paid employment. With respect to the Ontario Disability Support Program (ODSP), the definition also involves a "substantial restriction in one or more ... activities of daily living;' which are personal care, paid work or operating in the community (Ontario Disability Support Program Act, 1997: s4. (I)(c)). Neither 55I nor ODSP account for systemic discrimination in employment; this means that there are disabled people who cannot work because they are disabled (because no one will hire them), but cannot access disability social assistance because they are not disabled under the legislated definition. The ADA and human rights legislation are supposed to remedy this, but they don't, just as civil rights legislation did not end employment discrimination on the Looking Back but Moving Forward 1113 under certain pieces oflegislation, this is primarily not to benefit us but rather to benefit those in power. The same government that celebrated itself for passing the Ontarians with Disabilities Act arbitrarily changed the definition of disabled for social assistance, which led to thousands of people no longer being considered disabled (Toughill, 1995) and hence no longer eligible to receive financial support. Similarly, the conservative government in British Columbia redefined disability and required people receiving assistance to submit twenty-three pages of forms to re-prove they were disabled in order to retain their benefits (Lavender, 2003).gln the United States, the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act redefined disability, resulting in 100,000 children losing their henefits (American Academy ofPediatrics, 2001). These were all made more restrictive in order to reduce benefits for many people and to save the government money. When there is little or no benefit, but lots of stigma, to being disabled, definitions are broad. But definitions increasingly narrow as the level of and access to resources increases. These definitions, like all definitions ofmarginal- ized people, are used as forms ofcontrol, creating large groups of"others" when it is useful. Further, these definitions remain under the control of those with power and can be changed to serve their needs and desires. Who Is Disabled? People are disabled. We are disabled if those in power say we are. This is an identity that is fully out ofour control. However, because it is out ofour control, there are some people who are not allowed into the disability grouping because they need to access resources. By denying people the identity ofdisabled they are automatically refused resources, accommodations, social assistance and grounds of race or racism in general. Because there is a discrepancy between human rights protections. 1his is the plight ofmany people with non-apparent, who counts as disabled under the ADA and under SSI, there is a class ofpeople who are unable to obtain employment and are unable to get income support. The'se people are disabled only when it is to other people's benefit, not their own. or "invisible," disabilities. Further, as long as our communities remain classified Implications of Definitions of Disability When people actually get access to money, accommodations, equipment or attendant care, such as those individuals defined under social assistance legis- lation like SSI and ODSP, the definitions of disahility are rewritten, classifying very few people as disabled. legislation that is general, like the ADA and, espeCially, the ODA, the definitiorl'is broad and aimed at reaching as manyvoters as possible. While there may be some benefit to being defined as disabled in the category of disabled, rather than hold the power to create the category itself, we will have a divided disabled community, one that is unlikely to build unity and a base of resistance together. So, who is disabled? Anyone who is identified or who identifies as disabled. As Tom Shakespeare (2006b: 77) contends, "Defining disabilityin terms of social barriers or social oppression, rather than a biological impairment, opens up the category to a range ofother socially excluded or devalued groups:' The / ... problem with this argument is that it assumes that biological impairment and \, social oppression are severable, which they are not. Shakespeare takes opposition to, for example, fat people being included in the disability identity group. However, I argue that fatness is a disability. Obesity is a medicalized t-' 114/ Disability Politics and Theory condition and commonly regarded as a disability - at least depending on the definition. In Cook v. Rhode Island Department ofMental Health, Retardation, and Hospitals (1993), the court found that Ms. Cook was disabled under the ADA. She was a fat woman who was not hired because she was to be disabled by her obesity. The ADA defines a disabled person who h[s,' or is regarded as having, substantial limitations performing "major life activities:' One ofthese activities is working, and Ms. Cook was unable to work because she was regarded as disabled; therefore, she was disabled under the law. This was a curtail case as Cook continues to have positive employm,ent implications for fat people (Carpenter, 2006). An interesting circular definition ofdisability was established in this case, wherein if someone is fat and perceived to be disabled and that perception prevents them from working (or doing any of a number ofother activities) then that person is disabled. This First Circuit court demonstrates what a radical understanding of disability looks like: those with power (the employer) considered someone as disabled, treated her as if she was disabled and, therefore, she was disabled. -jThe correlations and/or intersectionality between fatness and disablism have also been discussed by a number of authors (Aphramor, 2009; Rowen, 2006; Herndon 2002; Cooper, 1997). Like other forms ofdisability, the definition ofand the attention paid to fatness or obesityhas shifted with social values. Charlotte Cooper (1997: 33) writes, "Many fat people ... grow up fearing our own bodies in shame, public ridicule and social ostracism and the cultural fear and hatred ofus can ruin our lives. I believe that self-defining as 'disabled' enables us to take ourselves seriously and demand others do also:' April Herndon (2002: 122) asserts disability needs to be understood "as a diverse social category that can meaningfully incorporate fat embodiments." Cooper goes on to say, "Fat people's demands are regarded as trivial compared to those ofdisabled people; thus, the notion ofcivil rights for fat people is little more than a joke" (1997: 33). Shakespeare and other disabled authors and activists perpetuate the triviaBzation offat people's experiences and demands by their conscious exclusion of fat people from the disability umbrella. Further, as disabled people have so commonly been the brunt of the other end of this dynamic - the ones excluded, the ones who have had their oppression supported by groups trying to reduce theirs - we should not be doing the same thing to others. Some people raise the concern that there will be people who identify as disabled who aren't actually disabled (see, for example, Shakespeare, 2006b). However, people do not claim marginality of their own choosing. There may be extreme or hypothetical ciri:!!>mstances in which such a situation might occur) but it doesn't make sense exclude people based on imagined worse case scenarios. Ifwe fail to let people self-identify as disabled, we also run the L.ooking Back but M.oving Forward /115 risk of legitimizing the medical model of disability, as it is the primary and oftentimes exclusive mechanism for labelling disability. Self-identification is the only way that people claim membership in the queer community and it has worked out fine. Imagine if queers were afraid that straights would start identifying as queer in order to get access to the few benefits that we have (equity hiring and awesome parties) that we made people go to a doctor to get documentation they were queer. A parallel example ofthis gatekeeper phenomenon is when women-only spaces exclude trans women. This is often justified on the basis that a man could come into the space) say he is a woman and be violent. In reality, a man or a woman could come into that space and be violent. In a situation like that, which is an imagined worst-case scenario, you deal with the behaviour at the'tit1?-e. As someone who has done training for homeless shelters, some of which were women-only spaces, I have had this same conversation a number oftimes with staff and residents. For the most part, I do not think that people raise issues out of malice but out of fear. The reality is that these hypothetical situations aren't going to happen, and if they do, we can collectively deal with the situations that arise. Further, because disablism is so deeply internalized in many disabled people, we may be hesitant to ask for accommodations. In my experience with the disabled people in my life, we don't "abuse" accommodations: we ask for fewer than we need or than would be helpful. There is a tremendous amount of stigma around disability, so disabled people are less likely to ask for what we need, not the other way around. Forcing people to prove they are disabled is not the solution to the hypothetical problem ofnon-disabled people saying tbeyare disabled in order to gain advantages. Disabled people have been overwhelmingly excluded from society. Our community shouldn't replicate the same problems. Disabled people's spaces can be empowering and important to our sense ofwell-being and belonging. We need to relearn ways ofbuilding community, rather than replicate the flawed divisions that have been forced on us for so long. Difficuity and Trouble: Real Experiences of Being Disabled Because many disabled people find pride in our disabled minds and bodies, this doesn't mean tbat we don't have difficulty with them. Sometimes, we do. But these difficulties are not because we are disabled; we experience them because we are human. Everyone gets frustrated with their minds and their bodies at some point. In spite ofdisablist discourse, this is not unique to those ofus classified as disabled. One ofthe key criticisms ofthe social model has been that it does not give Looking Back but Moving Forward /117 116/ Disability Politics and Theory space for people to talk about the difficulty that they have with their minds and bodies. Over a decade ago, Michael Oliver (1996) countered this criticism, : f saying that there just needed to be a social model ofimpairment to complement / the social model of disability. However, within the hegemony of thelPcial model, there has been an understanding that there is a separation betWlieh our political, public presentation and our private lives (Tregaskis, 2002). To say we should just wait for a social model of impairment is simplistic and dismissive. I feel a lot ofpressure from social modelists not to talk about the trouble that we have with our disability labels and our minds and bodies. I feel a responsibility to our fight for justice not to say certain things. Tom Shakespeare writes: We need to create space, within a radical theory of disability for people to talk about our difficulties. This does not mean that people who are identified as disabled necessarily have more trouble with our minds or bodies than non-disabled people. This does not mean that our diffi.culties are permanent or stagnant; rather, our perceptions of our minds and bodies shift depending on any number offactors. We refuse to talk about our lives, and our troubles around them, instead of talking about them openly within a radical framework. As a result, all it takes is one Christopher Reeve (1998: 287) calling for a cure and saying "merelybeing alive is not enough" to reinforce the disablist notions that our arguments are wrong and OUf lives really are worth less, or even worthless. OUf politics Many disability rights campaigners concede that behind closed doors they talk about aches and pains and urinary tract infections, even while they deny any relevance of the body while they are out campaigning. Yet this inconsistency is surely wrong: ifthe public rhetoric says one thing, while everyone behaves privately in a more complete way, then perhaps it is time to re-examine the rhetoric and speak more accurately. (2006b: 52) There is, however, a real fear for me, and I would guess the same for many others as well, to talk about my difficult experiences with my body. A few years ago, I wrote about how hard it is: I am afraid that I will help fuel the fires of hatred against disabled people. IfI say that [my life can be painful and isolating] that could be used to snpport the argnment that disabled people do not have full and rewardiug lives. If I address the difficulty that many disabled people have accessing support and the tension that that puts on personal relationships it could be manipulated to contend that disability should be eliminated to spare parents from the burden of having a disabled child. If! talk about the depression, and even the sense ofworthiessness, that can go along with chronic illness, chronic pain, and limited access it might be twisted around to bolster the position that we aren't worthy ofIife. If I honestly talk about the struggles that I endure on a daily basis what we have to say about our lives and the world may be reduced to inspirational material rather than meaningful and important interpretations ofthe world around us. (Withers, 2007: 36) These are the secrets I have kept keep secrets. order to help to build a movement. We all cannot draw distinctions between our public and our private lives. We cannot draw arbitrary lines down our lives, leaving out parts of our lived experiences because they are not convenient to our arguments. We need a disability politic that is true to our lives, one that doesn't make us keep secrets - secrets that ultimately weaken our arguments. Disability pride can co-exist with our real minds, bodies and lived experiences, which can include the joys and the difficulties that our diversity brings. Perfectly healthy people who never struggle with their minds and bodies, who are never challenged by them, do not exist. '!his "ideal" is a construct to perpetuate disabled people's marginalization. Evolutionary biologist Marlene Zuk argues that diseases have evolutionary purposes and are a basic presence in all of human existence. Zuk (2007: 10) cautions against a war on disease: "What we should hope for is not victory, but reconciliation:' Reconciliation, with respect to disability, would mean an acceptance of human diversity, including the fact that we all have different minds, bodies, needs and abilities. It would mean welcoming the different perspectives that this diversity brings. The kinds ofpeople who are currently labelled disabled have always been a part of our population and offer important perspectives and contributions. Disabled people are often celebrated for our accomplishments in spite of our disabilities (people like Franklin Roosevelt and Helen Keller). We are rarely recognized for the contributions we make because ofour disabilities. For instance, when I am having a hard time walking, 1walk very slowly and 1 notice a lot of what is around me. Because I experience the world differently than many of the people around me, I have a unique and useful perspective. Radical Access Within the disability rights and social models, accessibility means different things depending on who you are talking to and when you are talking to them. Ideas ofaccessibility were often more restricted and solely focused on physical Looking Back but Moving Forward /119 118/ Disability Politics and Theory access (i.e., lifts and ramps) in decades past, but the ideas surrounding access have begun to expand. Like all disability models coming from disabled people, one of the key means that one strives to communicate in ways that are easilyunderstood. It also means that oppressive language is not used. This includes disablist language, which is pervasive within North America and the Left. Sometimes, however, issues is access. However, the radical model does not advocate solely for ramps words do have multiple meanings according to the dictionary: "paralyze" can and lifts - though physical accommodations should always be We advocate and agitate for radical access. Access needs to be addressed collectively, across bodies, boundaries and borders. Radical access means acknowledging systemic barriers that exclude people, particularly certain kinds ofpeople with certain kinds of minds and/or bodies, and working to ensure not only the presence ofthose who have been left out} but also their comfort} participation and leadership. Spaces that need to incorporate radical access principles are organizational, they are educational and institutional, but they are also the spaces closest to us: our cafes, OUf officesJ our homes and our hearts. mean to fully stop; "deaf" can mean to refuse to listen; "disable" can mean to break or turn off; and "crazy "can mean ridiculous. But} as Chris Chapman says} Radical access is not about "universal design" or universal access - that is while these words "have acceptable usages about things other than people, in terms ofwhat dictionaries say, I would suggest that it is impossible to use these words without evoking people." Chapman (2010, n.p.) argues that "whatever dictionaries say - it would be impossible for me to say 'gay' and have it only signify 'happi" Double usage or not, disablist slurs need to be stripped out of everyday langnage if we want to create spaces where disabled people feel welcome and wanted. No space is ever accessible ifoppressive language is being used} no matter what other measures are taken to make it so. an arbitrary and fictional concept. According to Ron Mace, the man who coined the term "universal design;' it is "the deSign of products and environments to Conclusion be usable by all people, to the greatest extent possible, without the need for adaptation or specialized design" (Center for Universal Design, n.d.). The problem with this concept is that people and their needs change. An obvious, and unfair, example is that ifa building that fits a universal desigu or access mould is in Finland and I cannot go to Finland, then it isn't accessible to me. However, This model would not have been possible to imagine before the disability rights movement, the social model or the important work of many radical activists and thinkers. There are also many directions this model could go in. For example, there could be important shifts in language. For instance, the term disability justice is used, largely on the West Coast of the United States, to radically respond to the disability rights movement. Also, a disabled friend of mine, Amanda Dorter, has started using the word "disablized" to talk about disabled people in order to better indicate the imposition ofthe disabilitylabel. even if the building is downtown, but transit is expensive and I don't have the money, or if! am a Black man and the streetcar refuses to stop to let me on, or if 1am a wheelchair user and the streetcar is not phYSically accessible to me, that building is not universally accessible. Access doesn't just begin at the front door. When 1was much younger and was relatively new to activism, 1frequently talked about identity groups exclUSively as groups, not about the many individual people who make up those groups. One of the most valuable things that developing the radical disability model and radical access polities have taught me is that I cannot simply paint groups with one brush. Access politics demand that we treat people as people and look at each ofour needs and how to collectively meet them. While there are specific, basic demands that we need to put in place to ensure some standards ofacceSSibility, each ofus has our own needs, and access should be collectively negotiated between everyone involved. This negotiation is never neutral and cannot take place without considering present-day oppression, as well as the histories ofoppression. This negotiation is not about creating room for people in spite oftheir marginality but recognizing that everyone deserves space and\!!at their membership in an oppressed group brings perspectives and that are not only welcome but wanted. Radical access also includes intentional and accessible use oflanguage.This As people begin to see themselves, and others} in increasingly radical ways) our politics and the words that we use to talk about them will evolve. It is important, however, that the fundamental tenets ofthe model - the necessity of recognizing and relating to intersectionality, that disability is a social construction, that the disability label is imposed as a tactic to retain power and social control and that we have to create space for each other both in terms ofacknowledging our lived experiences and ensuring accessibility- remain intact. Rather than perpetuating unrealistic ideals for humans, radical disability theory calls for reassessing and revalUing people. We should not be penalized for falling outside of arbitrary and unjust norms ofproductiVity and independence. There is nothing wrong with us. We should be celebrated for our diversities and our perspectives. Radical access and radical disability theory are not fringe ideas - they are fundamental ideas looking at the essence ofwhat disability and access mean for everyone. Radical disability theory is about fighting to redistribute power and resources and creating accessible spaces and communities. 120 / Disability Politics and Theory By fighting to make it happen, I literally mean thatwe have to fight. Radical access and an end to disablism will never be handed to us. We have to work together to demand and create change. We have to move beyond the identity politIC ofphysical access and work to create access for all. We have to and consistently confront OUf own actions and ways ofreinforcing Perhaps most importantly though, we must organize. We must work in solidarity with other marginalized groups, and we must get past our differences and fight for justice, dignity, equality and access. Notes 1. I am putting this theory forward, it was collectively developed, particularly with Erickson. Griffin Epstein has also been integral to its articulation, espeClallythat of radical access. 2. I have avoided including anthologies or books that contain a number of chapters and discuss multiple oppressions because this frequently amounts to tokenism, rather than inclusion or intersectionality. The same is true ofa work that minimally talks about intersectionality. 3. 4. This particular reference is in relation to inclusion in schools. Early mainstream gay rights activists did not just work to establish themselves as Like first-wave and second-wave feminists non-disabled, but also as gay activists erased the plethora ofracial and cultural from theIr populatIons to gain access to privileges for the white people within that identity group. Its leadership actively upheld that homosexuals were more oppressed than Mrican Americans. Kameny (1965: 12) said: "In this country an individual known to be a homosexual would find it more difficult to get an education, at any level, in the school of his choice (or) in fact, in any school at alI) - than would a Negro in the South." This statement, while likely false, failed to acknowledge Black queers and trivializes the struggles of Blacks in the South. !he early mainstream movement also presented a specific class and gender role Image ofhomosexuals, Demonstrations required that participants follow a dress code, requiring gender appropriate business attire (Alwood, 1996; Kissack, 1995), gay liberation movement, as opposed to the mainstream gay rights movement, dId have an anti-racist, anti-sexist, anti-war, anti-consumerist, ifnot anti-capitalist 5. platform (Rimmerman, 2008). 6. notable exception to this pattern in public transit campaigns by disabled people a disabiI ity organization in Toronto. DAMN has campaigned for accessIble tranSIt for all using a radical access approach rather than a disability rights approach, IS that of 7. 8. Frequently, disabled people are seen as non-gendered or our disabilities are understood as our genders, Later, this was changed so peoplilt}ith certain diagnoses did not have to do it. References Abbott, Anne. 2011. Personal interview. Toronto, August 27. Accessibilityfor Ontarians with DisabilitiesAct. 2005. S,O. 2005, Chapter 11, last amendment: 2009, c. 33, Sched, 8, s. 3. Ad Punch. 2007. "Metlife Foundation: Alzheimer's Disease Steals Normal Life." <adpunch.org/entry/ metlife-foundation-alzheimers-disease-steals-normal-life>. Adelson, Betty M. 2005. Dwarfism, Medical and Psychosocial Aspeets ofProfound Short Stature, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. Ahmad, Waqar LU. 2000. "Introduction:' In Waqar LU. Ahmad (ed.) ,Ethnicity, Disability and Chronic Illness, Buckingham: Open University Press. AUbey v. Canada (Minister ofCitizenship and Immigration). 2004 FC 305. Alland, Alexander]r., Michael L. Blakey, C. Loring Brace, Alan H. Goodman, Stephen Molnar, J. Phillippe Rushton, Vincent M. Sarich and Audrey Smedley. 1996. "Review: The Eternal Triangle: Race, Class and 10;' Current Anthropology 37, Sl (February). Alwood, Edward, 1996. Straight News: Gays) Lesbians} and the News Media. New York: Columbia University Press. American Academy ofPediatrics, 2001. "lhe Continued Importance ofSupplemental SecurityIncome (58!) for Children and Adolescents With Disabilities:' Pediatrics 107, 4 (April). <aappolicy.aappublications.org/cgilcontent/abstract/pediatrics;107/4/790>. American Cancer Society, 201 O.A DefiningMoment: Annual Report 20 10. <cancer,org/ AboutUs/WboWeAre/AnnualReport/201O-annual-report>. American Institute of Philanthropy. 2010, Top 25 Compensation Packages. <charitywatch.org/hottopics/Top25>. American Psychiatric Association. 2000. Diagnostic and Statistical Manual ofMental Disorders: DSM-IV-TR. Washington, DC: Psychiatryonhne, <psychiatroyonHne. com>. Americans with DisabilitiesAet of 1990 (ADA) 104 Stat. 327, 42 USC § 12101 et seq. Aphramor, Lucy. 2009. "Disability and the Anti-Obesity Offensive:' Disability and Society 24, 7. Arad, Yitzhak. 1987. Belzee, Sobibo", TrebUnka, The Operation Reinhard Death Camps. Bloomington, Indiana University Press [1999]. Arthritis Society. n.d. <arthritis.ca/arthritis%20home/default.asp?s:= 1>, Ashby, Chris. 2010. "The Trouble with Normal, The Struggle for Meaningful Access for Middle School Students with Developmental Disability Labels." Disability and Society 25, 3. Aszuba and Salvation Army Sheltered Workshop et al. [1983] OJ. No. 2982. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne Like many good stories, the early threads of this one were woven over dinner, a large bowl of saffron laced paella, steaming on the table between two good friends. Leroy Moore and I were excited over his recent collaboration with Todd Herman – a film entitled Forbidden Acts that intertwines Leroy’s randy poetry with tasteful yet explicit cock and body shots – and sharing dismay that most people can’t seem to conceive that people with disabilities are sexual, let alone sexy. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne my forehead pressed hard against the cool wall sweat slips across the base of my neck leaving a salty trail for your tongue to track should you choose to follow. i inhale slowly in synch with your fingers' penetration. your wrist corkscrews circles getting smaller a zen garden in my flesh and i am pinned by your round shoulder to the wall and i open my mouth to taste plaster breathing you a wordless whimper of ecstasy. you hiss into my ear that i am a good puppy girl open all the way for you my cunt my heart my ass my mouth my mind everything open to your fucking vulnerable and so wanting. a knuckle presses the base of my hole and you uncurl a third finger up between my walls and you begin to thrust and i begin to chant your name daddy daddy please feed me daddy and you do filling me with a deep breathless undulating fuck each push taking more and your arm begins to pound. my mind spins a cacophony of screams to the meter of your voice because here is your sweet girl sweet girl sweet girl tighter good whore daddy's whore pretty whore tighter little toy fuck toy baby toy squeeze touch touch there daddy please scratch there there please and i am spread open pumping you stretched out needing you moan i push ignite ignite we ignite to catch pulses pulses it pulses and i catch fire branded and i come to you alive with awe. - patty berne sins invalid 2006 We’ve both been disabled since birth, and bluntly, we’re both pretty hot, and we both humbly know it. Still, every day throughout the day we each struggle with the disconnect between what we know to be true about our beauty and the passion of our lives, and what the world seems to believe, that we are less than, undesirable, pitiable… it’s hard, to know that you have been blessed while others seem convinced you’ve been cursed. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne Leroy F. Moore, Jr. Excerpt from Swimming against the Stream Sins Invalid 2006 Mmm, my sperm here it comes watch out! My sperm has history swimming against the stream My sperm has been rejected, feared, studied and labeled dangerous by the mainstream My sperm has caused scientists to write books Politicians to write laws Doctors to write prescriptions My sperm put the fear in Charles Darwin, slave masters and Hitler My sperm has women running to the doctors My sperm has been swimming against the stream My sperm gave birth to the eugenics movement My sperm is in test tubs marked “DAMAGED!” My sperm has been swimming in deep shark invested waters My sperm, you think could cause one, two or worse a whole generation like me… So, being an activist and an organizer, we did what we know how to do – organize. And a performance event on sexuality and disability was in the process of being born – Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility. Well, truth be told, at first it was going to be a small video screening for a few friends in a local café…and our early working title still conjures up images of bloody puddles in my mind. But the universe often offers unexpected gifts, in this case manifesting as our friends and veteran artists Todd Herman and Amanda Coslor. We told them about our idea and they offered to collaborate, contributing massively toward the aesthetics, contacts, available resources and experience. Sins Invalid then had a dedicated core group, moreover, a family. And to top it off, we then had a fiscal sponsor – The Dancing Tree. But, let’s backtrack for a second – what’s so innovative about this show? Well, besides the obvious “have you ever been to an erotic event featuring people with disabilities?”, let’s take a look at the context in which we live. We know that our culture maintains embodied and Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne enforced “norms”, norms that constrict all of us with unmet expectations and fears of the repercussion of not “measuring up”. Regardless of where we identify on the spectrum of sexuality, gender, size, ability, age, class, etc., the boundaries of our normalcy get policed. And when we transgress boundaries by having different abilities, gender presentation, etc, we are at risk of social and economic alienation, hostility, threats to safety / violence and the deepest acts of dehumanization – the implied and at times explicit message being that “they” (insert any oppressed group here – people with disabilities, African descended people, poor people, immigrants without state documentation and on…) are a different kind of human, “they” don’t feel or think as we do, “they” don’t deserve what we have, “they” are less than us. To bring the issue to the body, the definition of the “normal” body is becoming ever narrower, to the extent that even the natural process of growth and aging is seen as a problem to overcome. People with disabilities are often seen as “flawed” beings whose hope of normalcy rests in the “medical model”. Hold up – you gotta trust that this tangent into political framing is central to the telling of the story, okay? Cool. The “medical model” is a way of looking at a person w/a disability. The “problem” resides in that person’s body, and the solution is to “fix”, cure or in some way modify that disabled person to fit into existing conditions and frameworks. Hhhmmm…there’s something missing in this medical model… can it be an analysis of power? The disability rights movement articulated another lens of viewing disability – the social model. With this view, we understand that the “problem” resides in sociopolitical and economic structures which exclude an array of people and abilities, and the solution is social and institutional change. This should resound familiar with folks from a social justice perspective. But still let’s make sure we’re clear. Let’s say I go to a building which has stairs; my wheelchair does not climb stairs. Is the problem that I cannot walk up stairs? Or is the problem that the building owner and architect did not create a building which allows entrance to people with a variety of means of mobility? Is the problem my body? Or is the problem being excluded because my body is different than the building owner’s? Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne As people with disabilities, we are not oppressed by what we can or cannot do with our bodies or minds. We may be inconvenienced by living with an impairment, but what oppresses us is the systemic prejudice, discrimination, segregation and violence we face because we do not fall within a perceived “norm”. And the real irony is none of us do. As social justice advocates, we know there must be avenues for resistance to oppression and celebration – and here is the power of Sins Invalid. We challenge dominant notions of the disabled body and sexuality because we understand it is key to challenging the oppression of people with disabilities; moreover, our performers offer stories and visions affirming our strength as people with disabilities, creating beauty in which we are centered. So, meanwhile, back to our laptops and cell phones, we had a show to create – yowza! Leroy, Amanda, Todd and I began meeting in my tiny plant-filled living room to plan the show. A call to artists was placed and by the end of an arduous selection process we had a phenomenal group of artists defying norms, committed to speaking their truths about their bodies, their desires, their visions for the world – and not surprisingly given who we are – folks were mostly brown and black, mostly queer and genderqueer, 100% compelling. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne Powerful people with stories to teach – from ‘ron daniella, mixed race in ancestry and living genderqueer with multiple disabilities, storytelling about his childhood masturbation before he slowly strips to the deep thud of a triphop track to reveal his sinewy body and a ten inch dildo – tocrone-to-be solidad decosta delivering spoken word on living intersexed with eye contact so direct it burned the seat cushions; from dignified and flirtatious Lee Williams, an African American man perched in his wheelchair and in his 7 th decade of life entering the stage and baring his heart with the grace earned only through experience – to shy smiling Noemi Sohn describing the sexual and comic tensions of her first kiss in her home country of the Philippines while swaying to Marvin Gaye in the meter of cerebral palsy; from spirit infused Lisa Thomas-Adeyemo recanting poem, vignette and song in sensual mahogany tones – to Ron Jones, deeply thoughtful and artful moving in his meditative recreation of sunset skinny dipping; from fierce femme Leah Rae “spittin’ poetry like fire, upliftin’…” to Lady Venus in full “fat ‘n fabulous” burlesque glory as the MC. And that wasn’t even the video artists – Todd Herman, Thanh Diep, Leroy Moore, Oriana Bolden, John Killacky and myself. Next, we had to develop the look of a show which was simultaneously erotic and communicating resistant politics. It turned out to be easier than one might think, because people claiming their bodies and desires for liberation are tender and powerful and fierce – and that’s sexy. A central part of our process was leadership development. As a whole, the progressive left in the U.S. has not addressed its ableism1, making itself less than hospitable to people with disabilities. Regrettably, the radical left has not done much better. At the same time, to quote Millee Hill from her book Black and Disabled in the Arts, "The disability world contains the same schisms, 'isms' and inequalities that exist in society generally, and the world of disability arts is no exception in reflecting institutional racism." We saw and continue to see Sins Invalid as a place where people with disabilities can incubate a radical political analysis and their skills as artists, particularly those who don’t see themselves represented in the ranks of disability rights/disability culture/disability studies due to race, class, gender presentation, etc. Given this priority, our process looked like a hybrid between a community based organization and a performance – facilitated meetings where we shared updates about the show as a whole, performed for each other to 1 ableism: a set of practices and beliefs, embedded in institutions, which privileges people without disabilities and reinforces that non-disabled people maintain power Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne hone the on-stage work, and engaged in political discussions about our message; one on one’s between performers and Leroy Moore or myself to support the process of disclosing both personally and politically on stage – after all, folks were exposing both their bodies and soul; and, for a performance event, a great deal of collective decision making…that is until “tech”. Tech was, well, in my opinion…hell. The only thing that got us through it was the trust that had developed, the collective commitment of the group, and the intermittent splash of brilliance. But it was still wildly stressful. Things had to be done, and decisions made – quickly. It didn’t help that many folks, including me, were learning what one does during tech as we went along(design the show in the theater space; coordinate lights, sound and performer cues amongst all tech operators). Note to reader: event organizing and running a performance are two very different beasts! Nor did it help that, given cost, we had a tech day. Lots of people have a tech week. There were last minute coordination mishaps between the theater’s technical director and the lighting interns from the local high school. We had equipment failures, including last minute projector freezing and mics not working. Leroy injured his back moving a table, a performer showed up ill, a minor conflict between personalities erupted…it was wild. And, when the lights went down and a hush went through the audience, the magic unfolded. Three hundred people witnessed disabled artist after disabled artist, talking about desire, displaying our bodies and doing it in a way where we were setting the terms of engagement. We moved the audience through a new paradigm, with emotions in the theater shifting from voyeuristic eroticism to intimacy to loss to anger to risk to aroused by a new vision of embodiment. It was beautiful. Sacred for some. A healing happened in that theater. Artists boldly claimed their bodies as whole and perfect, inviting others to join, and they did. The love in the room was palpable. The respect was visceral. In hindsight it’s hard to explain – but I think most transformations are. At the show’s close, we had a sustained standing ovation. For the night, we were done. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne As I’m sure many organizers out there know, right after the magnetism of an event, there’s an equal and opposite push away from the intensity, a required respite, which can feel like emptiness. There’s a loss – there’s so much syn/energy in the centrifuge of an event that after the motor stops…well, there’s a deflation. Which is why, partly for political process and partly for emotional closure, we held debriefs…We debriefed and heard pluses and deltas from performers. We held a separate debrief for our logistics people, Ann Icardi and Maurice Campbell. And as a core group, Leroy, Amanda, Todd and I debriefed, processed and processed some more, identifying what we were proud of, what frustrated us, and what we would do differently if there were ever a next time. And then, in the weeks following, we received feedback from friends who’d seen the show. People said they were surprised that a show on disability and sexuality could be so hot. On the web, we found people with disabilities who’d been in the audience blogging about us. Scholars in disability studies approached us. And it became clear, our impact wasn’t just on that night – we had made a lasting impression on people. We had asked people to think and it seems that people did. Solidad DeCosta Excerpt from intersexed is how it intersects Sins Invalid 2006 I don't think you can handle my body! my curves swerve like a bat outta hell and my lines define something mixed you see, I am different -- not just reddish brown mixed-race different or pansexed dyke different, for while all those things are a part of me, they are not all of me/there's more/ When I was born, I was whole My body reflected the realities of both Hermes and Aphrodite … No longer full of shame or dread, I am whole again, and my scars just mark the path to my past and the rest is just facts which is not the same as truth because if the medical definition of your biology is the only reality, where does that leave me? For I do not consent to my invisibility, I shatter the glass freak cage and tell it on the mountain my fountain is receptive, my news is representative and my life is anything but done… Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne So, after a month or two hiatus, we started the process again, but this time with a few changes, including a longer timeline. One important piece of feedback we heard was the need for points of entry into the process. (Of course there were volunteer opportunities on the night of the show, but clearly that’s rather limited). So in Spring 07 we facilitated a series of writing and performance workshops for people with disabilities, and we expect to facilitate two workshop series in 08. The organizational process around the performance is another component with which we’d like to engage community members, so next year we hope to seed an internship program. A commitment made after last year’s event was to pursue foundation funding. AEPOCH Foundation expressed a strong belief in our vision, and started us off on a solid footing. With those funds we hired development consultant extraordinaire Elaine Beale, who pitched hard and we’ve now received additional grants from the San Francisco Arts Commission, the Zellerbach Family Fund, Hewlett Packard Foundation, Potrero Nuevo Foundation, and the Rainbow Grocery Collective. With the additional funding, we’re running the show 2 nights this year, with a serious crew – a stage manager, assistant stage manager, and lighting designer. And the show this year – it’s another full on production, with ten live performers and three video artists. We have artists coming to perform from around the U.S. and one artist flying in from France. We are in the thick of it; in fact, this text is being written 53 days until the show. We can’t describe the show quite yet as it has yet to happen, but we can predict that it will change people’s perceptions on disability and sexuality, and hopefully lead into deeper political shifts. We believe deeply in our work, our process, and our politic. We’ve gained strength from Audre Lorde, Paul Robeson, Eli Clare, Marlon Riggs, Otto Rene Castillo, Millee Hill, so many teachers. We want to magnify our message and engage a greater audience with a claim of beauty and justice for all people; we’ve decided to visually document the process and event and make a film about Sins Invalid. This is an incredible opportunity, of course a whole other layer of work, and at the end of the Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne day we expect it to be more than worth the effort. Because we have stories to tell and a movement to build. Lateef McLeod Excerpts from Living with Joey Sins Invalid 2007 “Just swallow” / You say to me / And I really do try / Cuz I be wearing tight fits / Like Rocawear jeans, big Ekco shirts, Gap hoodies /And when I am really GQ in a tailor made suit / And drool does not go with a tailor made suit / You know I try to look suave 24 7/ So there shouldn’t be a problem with me swallowing, right? / Well I have to remember to swallow / Every minute / Every hour / Every day / That means when I roll down the street / Swallow / Whenever I talk to someone / Swallow/ When I exercise/ Swallow/ When I go to school / Swallow/ Cuz I don’t want anyone to see me drool, especially you/ You always say that it makes me look gross/ And It is not my attention to gross you out/ So I try to swallow like a mad man/ I / (swallow)/ Try and/ (swallow)/ Consciously do something /(swallow)/ That everyone else/ (swallow)/ Does unconsciously/ (swallow)/ And you still/ (swallow)/ Can’t understand /(swallow)/ Why/ (swallow)/ Can’t I / (swallow)/ Learn to swallow/ (swallow)/ All the time / (swallow)/ It is like /(swallow)/ To toss you a tennis ball/ (swallow)/ Telling you/ (swallow)/ To throw it / (swallow)/ In the air and catch it/ (swallow)/ Every 15 seconds/ (swallow)/ And yell at you/ (swallow)/ When you drop the ball Swallow/ Just swallow/ Come on and swallow/ You know you want to. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne Maria R. Palacios Excerpts from My Sexy Disability Sins Invalid 2007 My disability is sexy. Sexy like Incan sunsets that paint oceans and skies and awaken the moon in your eyes when you're with me. My disability is sexy. Sexy like the uneven curves of South American mountains; sexy like rose petals and red lips; fields of eucalyptus and pine, dreams of a derailed spine and the smell of sex between my poems. I am sexy. Sexy like coffee and books; cream and sugar to taste. Go ahead and turn my page. Read me. My words are dragonflies and shooting stars, the ridges of my scars and the grand canyon of my cleavage. My disability is beautiful and sweet. I'm sweet like arroz con leche, and flan, sweet like ripe watermelons, like the scent of mint. I am cinnamon and sin. I am my own Ave Maria; Catholic girl gone bad, 21st century Frida Kahlo. I paint my sexiness with words. Sins Invalid: An Unshamed Claim to Beauty In the Face of Invisibility Patty Berne Sins Invalid recognizes that we will be liberated as whole beings – as disabled/as queer/as brown/as black/as genderqueer/as female or male bodied – as we are far greater whole than partitioned. We recognize that our allies emerge from many communities and that demographic identity alone does not determine one’s commitment to liberation. Sins Invalid is social and economic justice for all people with disabilities – in lockdowns, in shelters, on the streets, visibly disabled, invisibly disabled, sensory minority, environmentally injured, psychiatric survivors – moving beyond individual legal rights to collective human rights. Our stories, imbedded in analysis, offer paths from identity politics to unity amongst all oppressed people, laying a foundation for a collective claim of liberation and beauty. Disabling Sex: Notes for a Crip Theory of Sexuality Robert McRuer GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, Volume 17, Number 1, 2010, pp. 107-117 (Article) Published by Duke University Press For additional information about this article http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/glq/summary/v017/17.1.mcruer.html Access Provided by Western Ontario, Univ of at 11/19/11 8:08PM GMT DISABLING SEX Notes for a Crip Theory of Sexuality Robert McRuer The time has come to think about disability. Of course, “Thinking Disability” was not, on the surface at least, what Gayle Rubin had in mind when she penned the famous opening lines of her 1984 essay “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality.”1 And, even as I perform a crip appropriation of those lines, I am aware that, for many, sex and disability at times seem not so much intersectional as incongruous: “What exactly do you do?” is about as frequent a question for disabled people, in relation to sex, as it historically has been for many queers. The motivation behind the question, however, has usually been different. Although stereotypes of the oversexed disabled person engaged in unspeakable acts do exist, disabled people are more commonly positioned as asexual — incapable of or uninterested in sex. Speaking to such expectations, the disability activist Anne Finger wrote more than a decade ago, in an assertion now well known in the disability rights movement, “Sexuality is often the source of our deepest oppression; it is also often the source of our deepest pain. It’s easier to talk about and formulate strategies for changing discrimination in employment, education, and housing than it is to talk about our exclusion from sexuality and reproduction.”2 But what if disability were sexy? And what if disabled people were understood to be both subjects and objects of a multiplicity of erotic desires and practices, both within and outside the parameters of heteronormative sexuality?3 With such attitudes and questions in the background, I want to play with the title of this brief essay — “Disabling Sex” — stretching it to signify in a couple of different ways. I do that partly by linking “Thinking Sex” to another text from the same year that it has, without a doubt, never been linked to before. Deborah A. Stone’s 1984 book The Disabled State is largely a history of varied welfare state policies (from Britain, Germany, and the United States).4 It is chock-full of facts and statisGLQ 17:1 DOI 10.1215/10642684-2010-021 © 2010 by Duke University Press 108 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES tics. It mainly examines the push for restriction or expansion of various programs, and it is not particularly optimistic (given how consistently those programs collapse or fail). It is often very dry, even if, I argue, it contains some stunning arguments that the interdisciplinary field of disability studies, or any field, might still attend to. Hence one thing I am doing with my title, “Disabling Sex,” is bringing the disabled state to bear on thinking sex. And this essay attempts to make the most of the potential incongruity — if it is not entirely unthinkable that a lover might say “what’s that juicy opening line from Rubin’s ‘Thinking Sex?’ ” it is a bit harder to imagine “mmm, talk dirty to me, read me a few lines on the emergence of SSDI and worker’s compensation from Stone’s Disabled State.” Cripping Sex Before staging a quick, promiscuous encounter between the two 1984 texts, however, I should emphasize that Rubin’s famous article is, in fact, already saturated with disability in at least three ways. First, as Abby L. Wilkerson has suggested, Rubin’s “charmed circle of sex” marks an able-bodied/disabled divide, even according to Rubin’s own terms, since the location she identifies as “the outer limits” is where many crips end up.5 Here, for instance, are some of Rubin’s own terms: unnatural, nonprocreative, commercial, in groups, casual, crossgenerational, with manufactured objects. Wilkerson goes on to consider “Hermaphrodites With Attitude . . . men with breasts, ‘chicks with dicks,’ anyone who is HIV-positive or schizophrenic or uses a wheelchair” and demonstrates that the project of thinking about particular bodies and practices populating the “outer limits” could be infinitely extended.6 To add to Wilkerson’s reflections on sexualized practices outside the charmed circle (and some of these are outer limits even for many inside disability communities): devoteeism; fetishizing of the accoutrements of deafness (or, for that matter, deaf wannabes); self-demand amputation; barebacking; hospital scenes (whether Bob Flanagan’s very public ones or the ones staged by any ordinary person who wants to get off in a hospital gown during a hospital stay); potentially surveilled sex between people with cognitive disabilities in group homes; sex surrogacy (more about that later); or (to specify some of Rubin’s “manufactured objects”) sex involving crutches, oxygen masks, or prosthetic body parts. Recognizing his own new position outside the “charmed circle,” one contributor to the Lammy Award – winning anthology Queer Crips takes pride and pleasure in his location there, noting that he was a pretty average straight guy until his accident, after which he begins using a chair, thinks in expansive ways about what he might do with his body, becomes gay, and is open to just about DISABLING SEX: NOTES FOR A CRIP THEORY OF SEXUALITY anything kinky.7 Jump to the center of Rubin’s charmed circle, conversely, and you have what Wilkerson calls “normate sex,” which — following Erving Goffman — is probably only possible for one or two people; Goffman identifies this imagined normate as “a young, married, white, urban, northern, heterosexual Protestant father of college education, fully employed, of good complexion, weight and height, and a recent record in sports.”8 Second, the “sex panics” Rubin details are invariably about disability somehow. The disturbance, disorder, and danger that Michel Foucault talks about in his lectures on the emergence of the abnormal individual are specifically positioned as threats to “public hygiene” and health, and certainly the “increasingly decomposed, ravaged, skeletal, and diaphanous physiognomy of the exhausted young masturbator” plays a key role in the story he has to tell, as masturbation is etiologically connected to everything from blindness to insanity.9 And, of course, even as Rubin was writing in the mid-1980s, we were learning that “now, no one is safe” (to quote the famous Life magazine cover): queers, addicts, and sex workers out of control would infect everyone (and essentially kill them, but of course first comes significant disability).10 Rubin was both aware of what was coming in relation to AIDS and savvy enough to link the coming panic to earlier historical moments that were likewise simultaneously about both panic over sex and horror at what might happen to the body. In her discussion of AIDS, she writes, “A century ago, attempts to control syphilis led to the passage of the Contagious Diseases Acts in England. The Acts were based on erroneous medical theories and did nothing to halt the spread of the disease. But they did make life miserable for the hundreds of women who were incarcerated, subjected to forcible vaginal examination, and stigmatized for life as prostitutes.”11 Third, Rubin’s “concept of benign sexual variation” only really works if we actually populate and extend it with bodies — bodies that are non-able-bodied, or rather bodies (and minds) that are simply off the grid of the historical able-bodied/ disabled binary (normate sex may be founded on compulsory able-bodiedness, but that seems to me the first thing that goes out the window when we theorize and put into practice benign sexual variation). This point is implicit in what Rubin initially says about the concept — “variation is a fundamental property of all life, from the simplest biological organisms to the most complex human social formations” — and explicit in a range of queer bodily and sexual practices over the past few decades, from the ways that various lesbian feminist communities (including attendees at the 1982 Barnard conference that generated Rubin’s essay) worked to value, include, or eroticize a range of nonnormative bodies (think, for instance, of Audre Lorde’s imagined army of one-breasted women) to gay male 109 110 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES attempts to have promiscuity in an epidemic, insisting that all of us are living with HIV and figuring out what kinds of pleasures might be shaped by taking that fact into account.12 In these varied queer contexts, “disabling sex” signifies processes that are much more challenging, disruptive, resistant, and even, well, sexy.13 Around 1984 So what might any of this have to do with Stone’s Disabled State? Rubin’s project in “Thinking Sex” involved, at least partly, linking emergent forms of sexual hierarchization to the consolidation of industrial capitalism and paralleling resistance to that hierarchization to struggles around and against the bourgeois mode of production. Stone, as well, was concerned with how newly configured capitalist states were sorting bodies and behaviors into dominant and subordinated categories. At the same time that Rubin was insisting that “like the capitalist organization of labor and its distributions of rewards and powers, the modern sexual system has been the object of political struggle since it emerged and as it has evolved,” Stone too was reflecting on distributions of rewards and powers and on how structures of inequality rigidified in and through that distribution.14 The trajectory of Stone’s analysis, however, is slightly different from Rubin’s. Stone is certainly concerned with the subordination of disabled people and with the injustices that attend the disabled state. Yet she approaches these questions through a textured consideration of how modern states have in effect utilized disability. Stone examines what she calls “the distributive dilemma” in modernity and places the social construction of disability at the absolute center of the political struggle to define a given society: in modernity, according to Stone, “we ask [disability] to resolve the issue of distributive justice.”15 A breathtaking pronouncement, really, and a task that Stone acknowledges disability is certainly not up to, not least given the contradictory (and unjust) capitalist context from which this demand emerges. Capitalism first establishes a system where we are “free” to sell our labor power and not particularly free to do anything else and then has to manage those subjects who cannot or will not participate in that compulsory organization of labor. Two distributive systems, one work-based and one need-based, of necessity arise, and Stone grapples with the wide range of issues generated by these conditions: first, the various rationales that emerge to locate people in one category or the other; second, the “validating devices” that emerge to accompany those rationales, determining “objectively” which system, work- or need-based, should be operative for a given person (the very fraught and incoherent notion of a “clinical concept of disability” — that is, a disabled state DISABLING SEX: NOTES FOR A CRIP THEORY OF SEXUALITY that can be observed and noted by authorities — is invented for this purpose); and, finally and perhaps most impossibly, the ideological maneuvering that kicks into gear — capitalist societies must somehow “maintain the dominance,” Stone argues, of the primary, work-based distributive system, even if and as that system is really quite onerous to most people.16 “Disability,” as a putatively measurable social construction, is supposed to resolve all this. Which is where one of Stone’s other major contributions comes in, a contribution that is as simple and stunning as her pronouncement that disability is called on to resolve the question of distributive justice in modernity. Of necessity, given the state of affairs Stone describes, in The Disabled State (and the disabled state), disability emerges discursively as a privileged identity, which is why there is so much anxiety and suspicion around the disabled “category” and who gets to qualify for it. I find this 1984 insight incredible for many reasons, not least that twenty-five years later, if you surveyed the vast majority of disability studies 101 syllabi (including my own), stigma and exclusion would likely be the focus of a large portion of the introductory material. Like the deviants and perverts outside Rubin’s charmed circle, disabled people are often positioned in disability studies as stigmatized (and of course Goffman himself links sexuality and disability, and his Stigma often shows up on one of the very first days of the imagined courses I just evoked — indeed, selections from Stigma are in fact the only pre-1970 readings included in The Disability Studies Reader).17 I am certainly not arguing against understanding disabled people as stigmatized in contemporary societies, and neither is Stone: the “privileging” that she theorizes is itself, after all, clearly a form of subordination and stigmatization dependent on what Paul K. Longmore terms “ceremonies of social degradation.”18 The privilege of belonging to the disabled category Stone describes is rooted in stigma because the need-based system has already been positioned ideologically by the modern state as inferior to the work-based system (or, put differently, has been invented by the modern state to vouchsafe the superiority of the work-based system). I am, however, considering how understanding or overemphasizing stigma as isolation or social exclusion may obscure Stone’s quite nuanced arguments about privilege. I do not think it wholly suffices, especially in our own historical moment, to account for Stone’s thesis by saying that disability is stigmatized socially and culturally and “privileged” only in relation to the institutions invested in measuring disability to resolve the problem of distributive justice. That particular distinction between where disability is privileged and where it is stigmatized is true, to a large extent, but does not exhaust her points — or rather, potentially dilutes them and thereby makes it possible to avoid some more difficult or interest- 111 112 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES ing questions. In 1984, when it was (according to his campaign advertisements) “morning again” in Ronald Reagan’s America, one could argue — taking seriously Stone’s linkage of disability and privilege — that Stone facilitates a critique of an emergent neoliberalism and attends to the contradictions generated by the necessary simultaneity of exclusion and incorporation (from, but also into, the nation and the state) in ways that queer studies will not fully get around to theorizing until A Queer Mother for the Nation, Terrorist Assemblages, The Twilight of Equality, the homonormativity issue of the Radical History Review, and — indeed — The Straight State.19 There is perhaps some of this going on in Rubin’s “Thinking Sex,” but its explicit focus on the persecution and oppression of nonnormative sexuality (a focus that was, at the time, of course, absolutely crucial) is much more obvious than emergent, neoliberal incorporations. Cripping the State For disability studies, even as the field sustains a focus on stigma and exclusion, it is important to keep in view Stone’s oft-forgotten points about the centrality of privilege and incorporation. For queer studies, it is important to attend to how a theory of uneven biopolitical incorporation — the incorporation of some bodies (but not others) into the state — has been part of disability studies for as long as we have had Rubin’s notes for a radical theory of the politics of sexuality. Queer studies regularly demonstrates, at this point if not in 1984, how both the state and the cultural imagination can deploy sex and sexuality to mask exploitation or oppression in other locations. We are, in other words, used to “thinking sex” in these ways. My intent in conclusion is to push us toward similar ways of “thinking sex and disability” together. I attempt to exemplify thinking sex and disability in our moment via a brief concluding story of sex surrogacy and the Netherlands (and of course it’s much easier to tell the story of sex surrogacy via the Netherlands than it is via the United States — or most other places, for that matter). “Sex surrogacy,” where a sex worker either works directly with a disabled person or facilitates that person’s sexual interaction with a third party, is a very contested term. I use it here simply to tell this particular story, and I recognize that the language for the processes I discuss is currently in flux.20 In 2001 a man named Hennie van den Wittenboer won a seven-year legal fight to get help from the social services department in Tilburg. The Dutch Council in Tilburg agreed to pay for van den Wittenboer to have sex once a month with a sex worker. Van den Wittenboer is disabled and uses a wheelchair and — in a story DISABLING SEX: NOTES FOR A CRIP THEORY OF SEXUALITY taken up by Dutch television and newspapers — reported needing less medication and feeling less stress once the state-funded sex surrogacy was in place. Initially, during his legal battle, van den Wittenboer said, “[the council] said sex wasn’t part of the primary needs of a human being.” “Now,” he said in 2001, “there is a lady coming once a month, and I feel much better.”21 Since then, the Dutch government has more consistently codified these services, paying for hetero- and homosexual sexual services for mentally and physically disabled citizens, and, according to Selina Bonnie, “people with significant impairments” have been traveling to the Netherlands “to access sex services, which have been established by the state specifically for disabled people.”22 Although the legal battle prior to 2001 already suggests that the policy was not uncontroversial, it would seem that since then it has both become somewhat less so and partly, for some in the Netherlands (and elsewhere, in thought about the Netherlands), wrapped up in a national sense of who “we” are: nonplussed about sex, attentive to the health needs of “our” citizens, different from countries that are neither of those, and so forth. Even with the sexualized twist, this Dutch situation fits with one of Stone’s other arguments, that national attempts to resolve questions of distributive justice around and through disability get wrapped up almost immediately in national self-definition.23 At least two things are interesting to me as disability and sex come together around the state. First, I am interested in how sexualized discourses of “openness” might currently and paradoxically function normatively in the Netherlands (and elsewhere), especially in the wake of Pim Fortuyn’s rise to prominence a decade ago. Fortuyn was an openly gay politician running for parliament as a member of the right-wing, anti-immigrant Leefbaar Nederland Party, when he was assassinated by an animal rights activist in 2002. What came to the fore during Fortuyn’s campaign (and in some ways after the assassination as well) was how tolerance of sexual diversity and minoritized gay identities could actually be deployed to facilitate xenophobia and Islamophobia. I am not by any means equating the stories of Pim Fortuyn and Hennie van den Wittenboer; instead, I am making a point about dangers that can potentially circulate around sexual identity or disability or sexual identity and disability: “yes that’s who we are as a people” or even “yes that’s who we are sexually” and “look to the fairness with which we treat our minoritized citizenry” can coexist with what Jasbir Puar has so effectively analyzed as the targeting of other populations for quarantine and death. Puar calls the “securitization and valorization” of certain queer subjects in the contemporary moment “homonationalism” and contends that such securitization is intimately connected to how other subjects (what she calls “terrorist corporealities”) are marked as excessive and essentially targeted for death or elimination.24 113 114 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES Partly thanks to Puar’s important study, we are starting to get used to making these points in queer studies but not so much, I would say, in disability studies, even if Stone’s arguments authorized us to do so, at a time when a nascent queer studies really was not. A crip theory of sexuality, then, would insist on thinking seriously about van den Wittenboer’s rights and pleasures while being wary of how those might get discursively positioned by and around the state. It would, additionally, to use van den Wittenboer’s own words, want the sensation of “feeling much better” (in all its resonances) to be autonomous from one’s citizen-status (van den Wittenboer seems to have simply evoked the “needs of a human being” that, in his deployment, did not seem to be a category particularly tied to citizen-status). Van den Wittenboer did not necessarily position this as queer or crip theory on the ground, but there is no reason not to. Second, and this may be why we still have such trouble in disability studies with this kind of analysis around privileged identities, obviously the potential use of disability and sex to shore up who “we” are can and will coexist with plenty of “panic” (to invoke Rubin again), plenty of residual or even dominant discourses that still position disability and desire at odds or, put differently, disability as undesirable: debates in the Netherlands about physician-assisted suicide and, for some, a certain common sense that of course severe disability is cause enough for a state-sponsored exit, coexisted and coexist with the more emergent discourses I have been tracing.25 So, to end by repeating one of the questions I identified at the beginning: what if disability were sexy? Of course it already is: crip cultures are as hot and sexy, fierce and happening as queer cultures at their best (and these cultures obviously overlap already and should overlap more). But a crip theory of sexuality is simultaneously hip to how its sexiness might get used, or hip to how disability has already been used in so many problematic ways by the modern state. The sexy queer crip performer Greg Walloch can lead me to a conclusion here. In the 2001 performance video Fuck the Disabled, Walloch speaks of perusing bookstore shelves and coming across a Louise Hay book that identifies cerebral palsy as “brought to this earth to heal the family with one sweeping gesture of love.” After a pause and deadpan look up at his audience, Walloch continues rapidly, “brought to the earth with one sweeping gesture of love . . . you know, I don’t really want that job!”26 A crip theory of sexuality, thinking and rethinking sex and seeking to feel much better, would push for other sensations, other connections, but would always be attuned to the impossible work that disability has been asked to perform — to resolve questions of distributive justice (with one sweeping gesture of love?) while DISABLING SEX: NOTES FOR A CRIP THEORY OF SEXUALITY masking the contradictions inherent in the system that generated those questions of justice in the first place. Notes 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. Gayle Rubin, “Thinking Sex: Notes for a Radical Theory of the Politics of Sexuality,” in Pleasure and Danger: Exploring Female Sexuality, ed. Carole S. Vance (Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1984), 267 – 319. Anne Finger, “Forbidden Fruit,” New Internationalist no. 233 (1992): 9. I am taking these two questions, as well as the notion of incongruity that I am considering in these opening paragraphs, from Anna Mollow’s and my introduction to the anthology Sex and Disability (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, forthcoming). Deborah A. Stone, The Disabled State (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1984). Abby L. Wilkerson, “Normate Sex and Its Discontents: Intersex, Transgender, and Sexually Based Disability,” in McRuer and Mollow, Sex and Disability. Despite Wilkerson’s generative use of Rubin’s “charmed circle” and “outer limits,” she is elsewhere critical of how Rubin’s theoretical move separates sexual hierarchies from other social hierarchies. See Abby L. Wilkerson, “Disability, Sex Radicalism, and Political Agency,” National Women’s Studies Association Journal 14 (2002): 33 – 57. Alex Sendham, “Beginner’s Sex,” in Queer Crips: Disabled Gay Men and Their Stories, ed. Bob Guter and John R. Killacky (New York: Harrington Park, 2004), 191 – 97. Erving Goffman, Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1963), 128. Michel Foucault, Abnormal: Lectures at the Collège de France, 1974 – 1975, trans. Graham Burchell (New York: Picador, 2003), 235. “Now No One Is Safe from AIDS,” Life Magazine, July 1985. Rubin, “Thinking Sex,” 299. Rubin, “Thinking Sex,” 283. See Audre Lorde, The Cancer Journals (San Francisco: Aunt Lute, 1980); and Douglas Crimp, “How to Have Promiscuity in an Epidemic,” in AIDS: Cultural Analysis/ Cultural Activism, ed. Douglas Crimp (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1987), 237 – 71. Rubin, “Thinking Sex,” 309. Stone, Disabled State, 13. Stone, Disabled State, 21, 90. Lennard J. Davis, ed., The Disability Studies Reader (New York: Routledge, 1997). Paul K. Longmore, Why I Burned My Book and Other Essays on Disability (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2003), 240. 115 116 GLQ: A JOURNAL OF LESBIAN AND GAY STUDIES 19. Licia Fiol-Matta, A Queer Mother for the Nation: The State and Gabriela Mistral (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002); Lisa Duggan, The Twilight of Equality? Neoliberalism, Cultural Politics, and the Attack on Democracy (Boston: Beacon, 2003); Jasbir K. Puar, Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2007); Kevin P. Murphy, Jason Ruiz, and David Serlin, eds., “Queer Futures: The Homonormativity Issue,” special issue, Radical History Review (2008); Margot Canaday, The Straight State: Sexuality and Citizenship in Twentieth- Century America (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2009). 20. For a now-classic first-person account of his own experiences with sex surrogates in San Francisco in the 1980s, see Mark O’Brien, “On Seeing a Sex Surrogate,” Sun, May 1990, www.pacificnews.org/marko/sex-surrogate.html. 21. Keith Chalkley, “What a Pleasure,” Dispatchonline, November 10, 2001, www .dispatch.co.za/2001/11/10/foreign/BWORLD.HTM. The story was reported in the Dutch newspaper Brabants Dagbland and then circulated globally in English via “breaking news” Internet sites, largely of two sorts: blogs, sites, and chat forums focused on disability access issues and sensationalizing sites highlighting news of the (supposedly) humorous or bizarre. 22. Selina Bonnie, “Disabled People, Disability, and Sexuality,” in Disabling Barriers, Enabling Environments, 2nd ed., ed. John Swain et al. (London: Sage, 2004), 129. In the Netherlands, these issues actually predate van den Wittenboer’s legal battle, and an organization called Selective Human Relations has offered subsidized sexual assistance for twenty years. See Mutsuko Murakami, “The Right to Sex,” South China Morning Post, September 11, 2004, 15; Helen McNutt, “Hidden Pleasures,” Guardian, October 13, 2004, 2; Barbara Smit, “State to Pay for Sex Visits to Disabled Man,” Irish Times, August 26, 1992, 7. 23. This national self-definition is a discursive formation that then travels beyond the borders of the Netherlands. The cultural work of this discursive formation does not necessarily translate into more sexual freedom on the ground, and, indeed, according to Gert Hekma, the widely accepted idea of Dutch sexual openness has actually inhibited queer radicalism at the turn of the twenty-first century. See Gert Hekma, “Queer: The Dutch Case,” GLQ 10 (2004): 276 – 80. 24. Puar, Terrorist Assemblages, 3. Puar herself discusses the Fortuyn story and considers briefly some of the ways in which the Netherlands exemplifies the larger processes she is theorizing (19 – 21). 25. In the United States in 2009, as I was completing this essay, it seems to me that the processes I am sketching remain operative, even though I have chosen in the body of my text to “think disability” (or sex and disability) via another state. The United States remains a location where disabled people’s lives are overwhelmingly positioned as undesirable and often, through the corporate (and extremely punitive) insurance- DISABLING SEX: NOTES FOR A CRIP THEORY OF SEXUALITY based health care system, as dispensable. As health care debates raged in the United States during 2009, however (largely over proposals that would clearly not benefit the vast majority of people living with impairment or illness in the United States), certain key disabled figures were brought forward discursively to shore up who Americans as a people are or should be — most notably, Trig Palin, the son of former Alaska governor Sarah Palin, who was used in some of his mother’s speeches as a disabled American who would have to stand before “death panels” deciding whether he would live or die if the insurance-based system were to be reformed. Others, sometimes speaking for themselves and sometimes used as examples by family members, occupied similar positions at so-called town hall meetings around the country. My argument is that this particular biopolitical use of disability identity is relatively new and fundamentally antidisabled. 26. Greg Walloch, Fuck the Disabled, dir. Eli Kabillio, New York: Mad Dog Films, 2001. 117 The Body Is Not An Apology Sonya Renee Taylor The body is not an apology. Let it not be forget-me-not fixed to mattress when night threatens to leave the room empty as the belly of a crow. The body is not an apology. Present it not as disassembled rifle when he has yet to prove himself more than common intruder. The body is not an apology. Let it not be common as oil, ash, or toilet. Let it not be small as gravel, stain, or teeth. Let it not be mountain when it is sand. Let it not be ocean when it is grass. Let it not be shaken, flattened, or razed in contrition. The body is not an apology. Do not give it as confession, communion. Do not ask for it to be pardoned as criminal. The body is not a crime; is not a gun. The body is not a spill to be contained. It is not a lost set of keys, a wrong number dialed. It is not the orange burst of blood to shame white dresses. The body is not an apology. It is not the unintended granules of bone beneath wheel. The body is not kill. It is not unkempt car. It is not a forgotten appointment. Do not speak it vulgar. The body is not soiled. Is not filth to be forgiven. The body is not an apology. It is not father’s back hand; is not mother’s dinner late again wrecked jaw howl. It is not the drunken sorcery of contorting steel round tree. It is not calamity. The body is not a math test. The body is not a wrong answer. The body is not a failed class. You are not failing. The body is not a cavity; is not hole to be filled, to be yanked out. It is not a broken thing to be mended, be tossed. The body is not prison; is not sentence to be served. It is not pavement; is not prayer. The body is not an apology. Do not give the body as gift. Only receive it as such. The body is not to be prayed for; is to be prayed to. So, for the evermore tortile tenth grade nose, Hallelujah. For the shower song throat that crackles like a grandfather’s Victrola, Hallelujah. For the spine that never healed; for the lambent heart that didn’t either, Hallelujah. For the sloping pulp of back, hip, belly, Hosanna. For the errant hairs that rove the face like a pack displaced of wolves. Hosanna, for the parts we have endeavored to excise. Blessed be the cancer, the palsy, the womb that opens like a trap door. Praise the body in its black jack magic, even in this. For the razor wire mouth. For the sweet god ribbon within it. Praise. For the mistake that never was. Praise. For the bend, twist, fall, and rise again, fall and rise again. For the raising like an obstinate Christ. For the salvation of a body that bends like a baptismal bowl. For those who will worship at the lip of this sanctuary. Praise the body for the body is not an apology. The body is deity. The body is God. The body is God; the only righteous love that will never need to repent. You Get Proud by Practicing by Laura Hershey If you are not proud For who you are, for what you say, for how you look; If every time you stop To think of yourself, you do not see yourself glowing With golden light; do not, therefore, give up on yourself. You can get proud. You do not need A better body, a purer spirit, or a Ph.D. To be proud. You do not need A lot of money, a handsome boyfriend, or a nice car. You do not need To be able to walk, or see, or hear, Or use big, complicated words, Or do any of those things that you just can’t do To be proud. A caseworker Cannot make you proud, Or a doctor. You only need more practice. You get proud by practicing. There are many many ways to get proud. You can try riding a horse, or skiing on one leg, Or playing guitar, And do well or not so well, And be glad you tried Either way. You can show Something you’ve made To someone you respect And be happy with it no matter What they say. You can say What you think, though you know Other people do not think the same way, and you can keep saying it, even if they tell you You are crazy. You can add your voice All night to the voices Of a hundred and fifty others In a circle Around a jailhouse Where your brothers and sisters are being held For blocking buses with no lifts, Or you can be one of the ones Inside the jailhouse, Knowing of the circle outside. You can speak your love To a friend Without fear. You can find someone who will listen to you Without judging you or doubting you or being Afraid of you And let you hear yourself perhaps For the very first time. These are all ways Of getting proud. None of them Are easy, but all of them Are possible. You can do all of these things, Or just one of them again and again. You get proud By practicing. Power makes you proud, and power Comes in many fine forms Supple and rich as butterfly wings. It is music when you practice opening your mouth And liking what you hear Because it is the sound of your own True voice. It is sunlight When you practice seeing Strength and beauty in everyone, Including yourself. It is dance when you practice knowing That what you do And the way you do it Is the right way for you And cannot be called wrong. All these hold More power than weapons or money Or lies. All these practices bring power, and power Makes you proud. You get proud By practicing. Remember, you weren’t the one Who made you ashamed, But you are the one Who can make you proud. Just practice, Practice until you get proud, and once you are proud, Keep practicing so you won’t forget. You get proud By practicing. - - - - . • Freaks and Queers I : Naming Handicap[Jtd. A disabled person sits on the street, begging for her next meal. This is how we survived in Europe and the United States as cities grew big and the economy moved from a land base to an industrial base. We were beggars, caps in hand. This is how some of us still survive. Seattle, 1989: a white man sits on the sidewalk. leaning against an iron fence. He smells of whiskey and urine, his body wrapped in tom cloth. His legs are toothpick-thin, knees bent inward. Beside him leans a set of crutches. A Styrofoam cup, half full of coins, sits on the sidewalk in front of him. Puget Sound stretches out behind him, water sparkling in the sun. Tourists bustle by. He strains his head up, trying to catch their eyes. Cap in hand. Handicapped. 1 Disabled. The car stalled in the left lane of traffic is disabled. Or alternatively, the broad stairs curving into a public building disable the man in a wheelchair. That word used as a noun (the disabled or people with disabilities), an adjective (disabled people), a verb (the accident disabled her): in all its forms it means "unable," but where does our inability lie? Are our bodies like stalled cars? Or does disability live in the social and physical environment, in the stairs that have no accompanying ramp? I think about language. I often call nondisabled people able-bodied, or, when I'm feeling confrontational, temporarily able-bodied. But if I call myself disabled in order to describe how the ableist world treats me as a person with cerebral palsy, then shouldn't I call nondisabled people enabled? That word locates the condition of being nondisabled, 67 ee ELI EXILE CLARE not in the nondisabled body, but in the world's reaction to that body. This is not a semantic game. Cripple. The woman who walks with a limp, the kid who uses braces, the man with gnarly hands hear the word cripple every day in a hostile nondisabled world. At the same time, we in the disability rights movement create crip culture, tell aip jokes, identify a sensibility we call crip humor. Nancy Mairs writes: I am a aipple. I choose this word to name me.... People--crippled or not- wince at the word aipple, as they do not at handicapf'td or disabled. Perhaps I want them to wince. I want them to see me as a tough customer, one to whom the have not been kind, but who can face the brutal truth of her existence squarely. As a aipple, I swagger.' Gimp. Slang meaning "to limp." Gimp comes from the word gammy, which hobos in the 18th century used among themselves to describe dangerous or unwelcoming places. Hobo to hobo, passing on the road: "Don't go there. It's gammy." Insider language, hobo solidarity. And now a few centuries later, one disabled person greets another, "Hey, gimp. How ya <loin?" Insider language, gimp solidarity. Retard. I learned early that words can bruise a body. I have been called retard too many times, that word sliding off the tongues of doctors, classmates, neighbors, teachers, well-meaning strangers on the street. In the years before my speech became understandable, I was universally assumed to be "mentally retarded." W hen I started school, the teachers wanted me in the "special education" program. My parents insisted I be given yet another set of diagnostic tests, including an IQ test, and I-being a white kid who lived in a house full of books, ideas, and grammar-school English, being a disabled kid who had finally learned how to talkscored well. They let me join the "regular" first grade. I worked overtime to prove those test results right Still I was retard, monk.ey, defect on the playground, in the streets, those words hurled at my body, accompanied by rocks and rubber erasers. Even at home, I heard their echoes. My father told me more than once to stop AND P R IDE walking like a monkey. My mother often talked about my birth defa:t. Words bruise a body more than rocks and Differently abled, physical{y challmged. Nondisabled people, wanting to rushion us from the cruelty of language, invented these euphemisms. In explaining her choice of the word cripple, Nancy Mairs writes: D!fferent!Y abled ... partakes of the same semantic hopefulness that transformed COWltries from undePeloped to underdevtlaped, then to las developol, and finally deveJqping nations. People have continued to starve in those rountries during the shift. Some realities do not obey the dictates of language.' Differently abled is simply easier to say, easier to think about than disabled or handicapped or crippled. Freak. I hold fast to my dictionary, but the definitions slip and slide, tell half stories. I have to stop here. Freak forces me to think about naming. Handicapped. disabled, cripple, gimp, retard, d!ffermtly abled. I Wlderstand my ielationship to each of these words. I scoff at handicapped, a word I grew up believing my parents had invented specifically to describe me, my parents who were deeply ashamed of my cerebral palsy and desperately wanted to find a cure. I use the word disabled as an adjective to name what this ableist world does to us crips and gimps. Cripple makes me flinch; it too often ac.oompanied the sticks and stones on my grade school playgroWld, but I love aip hwnor, the audacity of turning cripple into a word of pride. Gimp sings a friendly song. full of irony and understanding. Retard on the other hand draws blood every time, a sharp, sharp knife. In the world as it should be, maybe disabled people would be differmtly abled: a world where Braille and audioand magazines were a matter of course, recorded editions of and hearing people signed ASL; a world where schools were fully integrated, health care, free and unrationed; a world where universal ac.cess meant exactly that; a world where disabled people were not locked up at home or in nursing homes, relegated to sheltered employment and paid sweatshop wages. But, in the world as it is, d!fferent!y abled, cha1Jmgtd tell a wishful lie. 70 ELI CLARE: Handicapped. disabled, cripple. gimp, retard, .differently abled, freak. I need to stop here. Frmlc I don't understand It me: I don't quite like it, can't imagine using it as some poliuaz.ed disabled people do. Yet I want freak to be as easy as the words queer and cripple. Queer, like cripple, is an ironic and serious word I use to describe myself and others in my communities. Queer speaks about who I am, my life as a dyke, my relationship to the domJnant culture. Because of when I came out-more than a decade after the Stonewall Re.b ellion-and where-into a highly politicized urban dyke community-queer has always been easy for me. I adore its defiant external edge, its comfortable internal truth. Queer belongs to me. So does cripple for many of the and cripple are cousins: words to shock, words to infuse with pnde and self-love, words to resist intemaliz.ed hatred, words to help forge a politics. They have been by many gay/lesbiarv'bVtrans people, cripple, or cnp, by many disabled people. Frmlc is another story. Unlike queer and crip, it has not been 4 widely embraced in my communities. For me freak scary edge; it takes queer and cripple one step too far; it doesn t feel good or liberating. . . . . This profusion of words and their vanous relauonships to marginalized people and politiciz.ed communities fascinates me. Which words get embraced, ·which don't, and why? Queer but not pmJert. Cripple, and sometimes freak, but not retard. of the ugly and demeaning words used to batter and bait marginalized peoples-racist, sexist, classist, ableist, homophobic slurs-pervert and retard nearly burst with hurt and bitterness, anger and reminders of self-hatred.s I doubt the community and the disability community respectively will ever claim those as our own. In contrast crip, queer, and freak have come to sit on a cusp. For some of us, they carry too much grief. For others, they can be chosen with glee and pride. Qu«r and crip are mine but not freak, and I want to know why. What is it What bitterness, what pain, does it hold that cnppk, with its connotations of pitiful, broken bodies, and queer, with its sweeping defini- EXILE ANO PRICE 71 tions of normality and al:mormality, do not? I want to unravel freak, to pull on the thread called history. II : Freak Show The history of freakdom ext.ends far back into western civilization. The court jester, the pet dwarf, the exhibition of humans in Renaissance England, the myths of giants, minotaurs, and monsters all point to this long history, which reached a pinnacle in the midl 800s to mid-l 900s. During that century, freaks were big entertainment and big business. Freak shows populated the United St.ates, and people flocked to the circus, the carnival, the storefront dime museum. They came to gawk at freaks, savages, and geeks. They came to be educated and entertained, titillated and repulsed. They came to have their ideas of normal and abnormal, superior and inferior, their sense of self, confirmed and strengthened. And gawk they did. But who were they gawking at? This is where I want to start. What.ever these paying customers-rubes in circus lingo-believed, they were not staring at freaks of nature. Rather, the freak show tells the story of an elaborate and calculated social construction that utilized performance and fabrication as well as deeply held cultural beliefs. At the center of this construction is the showman, who, using costuming, staging, elaborate fictional histories, marketing, and choreography, turned people from four groups into freaks. First, disabled people, both white people and people of color, became Armless Wonders, Frog Men, Giants, Midgets, Pinheads, Camel Girls, Wild Men of Borneo, and the like. Second, nondisabled people of rolor-bought, persuaded, forced, and kidnapped to the United St.ates from colonized countries all over the world-became Cannibals and Savages. Third, nondisabled people of color from the United St.ates became Natives from the Exotic Wilds. And fourth, nondisabled people with visible differencesbearded women, fat women, very thin men, people covered with tattoos, intersexed people-became wondrous and horrifying ex- 7Z ELI CLAR£: hi.bits. Cultural critic and disability theorist Rosemarie Garland 'Thomson argues that the differences among these sometimes over- lapping of people melded together. Perhaps the freak. show's most remadcable effect was to eradicate distinctions among a wide variety of bodies. ronfiating them W\der a single sign of the freak-as-other.... [A]ll the bodily characteristics that seemed different or threatening to the dominant order merged into a kind of motley chorus line of physical difference on the freak show st.age.... [A] nondisabled person of color billed as the "Fiji Cannibal'" was equivalent to disabled. Euro-American called the In the eyes of the rube, the freak show probably WdS one big melting pot of differentness and At the same time, the differences among the various of people who "M>rked as freaks remain important to undemanding the freak show in its entirety. But whatever the differences, all four held one thing in common: nature did not make them into freaks. The freak show did. carefully ronstructing an exaggerated divide between "normal" and Other, sustained in tum by rubes willing to pay good money to stare. Hiriam and Barney Davis performed wildly for their audiences, snapping, snarling, talking gibberish from stage. The handbill sold in ronjunction with their display described in lengthy, imagined detail "What We Know About Waino and Plutano, the Wild Men of Borneo... In reality Hiriam and Barney were white, developmentally disabled brothers from an immigrant farm family who lived in Ohio. Their mother, after many offers which she fused, finally sold them to a persistent showman for a Wc1Sh pan full of gold and silver. Off-stage Hiriam and Barney were quiet, unasswning men. In one photo they stand flanking their manager Hanford Lyman. Their hair falls past their shouldeis; they sport neatly trimmed goatees; Hiriam folds his hands in front of him; Barney rocks his hands on his they look mildly and directly into the camera Ann 1bompson, a white woman born without arms, posed as "The Annless Wonder." From stage she signed and sold photograpm as souvenirs, writing with her toes sayings like, "So you per- E XILE AND PRIDE 73 ceive it's really true, when hands are lacking, toes will do," or more piously, "Indolence and ease are the rust of the mind." In her autobiography, which she hawked along with her photos and trinkets, Ann presented herself as a respectable, religious lady. In one photo, she sits beside her husband and son, all of them -wearing formal Victorian clothing. William Johnson, a developmentally disabled Ahican-American man from New Jersey, became the "What Is It?" the "missing link." the "Monkey Man." He wore hairy ape-like costumes, shaved his head bald except for a little tuft at the very top, and posed in front of a jungle backdrop. The showmen at P.T. Barnum's American Museum in New York City described William as "a most singular animal, which though it has many of the features and characteristics of both the human and the brute, is not, apparently, either, but in appearance, a mixture of both-the connecting link between humanity and brute creation."7 Although the way in which he came to the freak show is unknown-Barnum may have bought him at a young age and coerced him into performing at first-William died in his 80s at home, a well-liked and happy man, referred to, by his oo-workers, as the "dean of freaks." Charles Stratton, a working-class short person-dwaif in medicaJ terminology-from Connecticut worked the freak show as General Tom Thumb. He played the role of a European aristocrat, complete with resplendent suits, a miniature carriage pulled by ponies, and meetings with rich and famous people around the world, becoming in the process a rich man himself. When Charles and Mercy Lavinia Warren Bump, a short woman who also worked the freak show, fell in love and decided to get married, P.T. Barnum set out, in an extravagant example of showmanship, to tum their wedding into a huge media spectacle. He WdS successful; 2,000 people attended the event, and The New York Times ran a fullpage story, headlined "Loving Lilliputians." Charles and Mercy played their roles and used the publicity to springboard another European tour. Two Congolese men and thirteen Congolese women, wearing large, heavy jewehy in their pierced lips, were bought by circus agent Ludwig Bergonnier and shipped from Ahica to the United 74 ELI EXILE CLARE States. The poster advertising their display in the Ringling Brothers Circus freak show proclaimed them "Genuine MonsterMouthed Ubangi Savages World's Most Weird Living Humans from Africa's Darkest Depths." The women wore only gunny sack skirts; the men, dressed in loincloths, carried spears. Ubangi was a name randomly pulled off a map of Africa and had no relationship to where these women and men had actually lived. The Davis brothers, Thompson, Johnson, Stratton, the African men and women did not slide into the world as infant freaks. They were made freaks, socially constructed for the purposes of entertainment and profit. This construction depended not only upon the showmanship of the "freaks" and their managers. It also capitalized on the eagerness of rubes to gawk at freaks and on the ableism and racism which made the transition from disabled person to freak, nondisabled person of color to freak. even possible. Without this pair of oppressive ideologies, the attendant fear and hatred of disabled people and people of color, and the desire to create an Other against whom one could gauge her/his normality, who could ever believe for even one farcical moment that William Johnson was Darwin's missing link; Barney Davis, a wild man from Borneo; Ann Thompson, an armless wonder? Ann, in that plwto ofyou with your husband and son, you sit on a rng decorated with crosses, a rug you crocheted. The slwwmen made a big deal ofyour dexteriry. But did you learn to crochet as a freak slww stunt? Or did you, like so ma'!)' women ofyour time, sew and knit, embroider and crochet, simp!J' as a necessify and a pastime? Although ableism and racism enter the picture here, the people who worked the freak show did not live as simple victims. Many of the "freaks" themselves-particularly those who were not developmentally disabled or brought to the United States from Africa, Asia, South and Central America, the Pacific islands, and the Caribbean-controlled their own acts and displays, working alongside their managers to shape profitable shows. Many of them made decent livings; some, like Charles Stratton and Mercy Lavinia Warren Bump, even became wealthy. When P.T. Barnum lost all his money in a bad business deal, Stratton came out of semi-retirement and rescued him by agreeing to go on yet another lucra- ANO PR I DE 75 tive European tour. Others, like the Hilton sisters, conjoined twins who worked in the mid- l 900s, became their own managers, or, like Bump and her Lilliputian Opera Company, formed their own performing groups, which were employed by dime museums and traveling vaudeville companies. In other words, white, nondisabled freak show owners and managers didn't only exploit "their freaks." The two groups also colluded together to dupe the audience, to make a buck off the rube's gullibility. In the subculture of the freak show, rubes became the exploited victims-explicitly lied to, charged outrageous sums for mere trinkets, pickpocketed, or merely given incorrect change at the ticket COllllter. Charles, there is a picture ofyou, taken during a visit with the Queen of England. You have a miniature sword drawn and are staging a fight with a poodl.e. Your wife, Mercy, writes of embarrassment and outrage. Of presidential candidate Stephen Douglas, she remembers: "He expressed great pleasure at again seeing me, and as I stood before him he took my hand and, drawing me toward him, stooped to kiss me. I instinctively drew back. feeling my face suffused with blushes. It seemed impossible to make people at first understand that I was not a child." 8 Didyou share her embarrassment and outrage asyou faced that poodle? Or didyou and Barnum laugh long and hard asyou concocted your stunts? The questions about exploitation are complicated; simple answers collapse easily. Robert Bogdan in his history Freak Show excerpts a letter he received from freak show manager Ward Hall: "I exhibited freaks and exploited them for years. Now you are going to exploit them. The difference between authors and the news media, and the freak show operators is that we paid them." Bogdan comments, "[Hall's] use of the word exploit was playful. He does not think he exploited them. He had a business relationship, complete with contract. with his troupe of human oddities. His livelihood depended on them, as theirs did on him. He had no pretensions of doing good ...." 9 Although Bogdan chronicles the social construction of freaks in amazing detail and refuses to situate the people 76 ELI CLARE who worl<ed the freak shows as passive victims, I believe he is reaching toward a simple answer to the question of exploitation. Hall's exploitation of people who worked as freaks may not have revolved around ableism and racism. Maybe he wasn't acting out of fear and hatred of disabled pe0ple and people of color, out of his internal psychological sense and the external legislated reality of privilege. And then again. maybe he was. But most certainly, like all the people who profited from the freak show, he used ableism and racism to his benefiL At best, this use of oppression by a white, nondisabled businessman is problematic. In his letter, Hall explicitly casts himself as a boss exploiting his workers, placing the freak show within the conteXt of capitalism. Bogdan defends Hall in a backhanded way when he writes: "[Hall) had no pretensions of doing good." But since when do bosses in most profit-making business have real pretensions of doing good by their workers? Doing good may be a byproduct of making profit, but only a byproduct. Is Hall any less exploitative because he was acting as a boss rather than, or in addition to, a racist white person and an ableist nondisabled person? Any estimation of exploitation in the freak show needs to also include Hall and "his troupe of human oddities" colluding together to exploit the rube. Sometimes this exploitation carried with . it a sense of absurdity, a sense that the rubes would believe any· thing, that they were simple, gullible fools. Other times this exploitation was pure thievery, the sideshow creating situations in which it was easy to steal the rube's money. But to cast the audience only as victim neglects the very real ways in which the freak show bolstered white people's and nondisabled people's sense of superiority and well-being. The social construction of freaks always . relied upon the perceived gap between a rube's normality and a freak's abnormality. Unsurprisingly, normality was defined exclusively in terms of whiteness and able-bodiedness. The complexities of exploitation pile up, layer upon layer. White people and nondisabled people used racism and ableism to turn a profit. The freak show managers and owners were bosses and as such had power over their workers, the people who worked as freaks. Boss and worker together consciously manipulated their EXILE ANO PRIDE 77 audience. 1bat same audience willingly used lies to strengthen its own self-image. Given this maze of I have trouble accepting the assesmlellt that exploitation in the freak show, if it existed at alL Wd.Sll't truly serious. Rather, I believe it exerted :_a.·-. UWlElllX U\ many UUO.:UUl\S. Working as a freak never meant working in a respectful, liberating environment, but then disabled people had no truly respectful and liberating options available to them in the mid- l 800s. They rould beg in the streets. They oould survive in almshouses, where, as reformer Dorothea Dix put it, mentally ill people and veloprnentally disabled people lived "in cages, closets, cellars, stalls, pens! Chained. naked, beaten with rods, and lashed into obedience." 10 They could live behind dosed doors with their families. C.Onsider William Jolmson. As a Black, developmentally disabled man who apparently had no surviving family, he had few options. P.T. Bamwn fotmd William's counterpart, the woman displayed as the female "What ls It?," abandoned in an outhouse, rovered with shit, left to die. In a world such as this, where the freak show existed alongside the street, the almshouse, the outhouse, William's position as the "dean of freaks" doesn't look so bad William. late after the ahibi!s had dosed. tire rubes grJN home, did you andJ't1llT frimds to f"UD1, passing a bottle of whiskey round and round? Didyou entertain some more, pull outJ't1llTfoJd1e and play silly songs? Or did you sit bad and listen to one joke after another untilyou wm brrathless with fmlglrter? In many ways working as a freak was similar to working as a prostitute. Cultural worker and working<.lass scholar Joanna Kadi writes, "Left-wing working<.lass analysis ... situates prostitution within the context of capitalism (one more real[y lousy job), celebrates the women who survive, thumbs its nose at the moralistic middle-class attitudes that condemn without llllderst.anding, and relays the women's stories and perspectives." 11 This same theoretical and political framework can be used to examine the job of freak. Oearly, working as a freak meant working a lousy job, many times the only job available, in a hostile ableist and racist world Sometimes the job was lousier than others. 1be African women and men who performed as "Ubangi savages"' made a nickel on 78 ELI EXILE CLAR!: every photDgraph they sold, nothing else; whereas their manager, Ludwig Bergonnier, made $1,500 a week renting "his display" to the Ringling Brothers Circus. 1n contrast, Charles Stratton became rich, owning a horse farm and a yacht. Still others, like William Johnson, found community among the people who worked the freak show. You who ended up in the history books named only "Ubangi Sav- ages, " no names ofyour own: night after night, you paraded around the tent, air sticl;y against your bare skin, burlap prickly against your covered skin. Didyou come to hate &rgonni.er? cirrus What did the people who worked as freaks think of their jobs, their lives? I want to hear their stories, but like the stories of other marginaliz.ed people, they were most often never told, but rather eat.en up, thrown away, lost in the daily grind of survival. Some of the "freaks" didn't read or write, due to particular disabilities or to the materiaVsocial circumstances of their lives. Or, as in the case of many of the people brought here from other countries, they didn't speak English and/or didn't come from cultures that passed stories through the written word. A few "freaks" did write autobiographies, but these pamphlets or books were mostly part of the whole production, sold alongside the handbills and photos. These stories ended up being part of the showmen's hyperbole. So, in order to reconstruct, celebrate, and understand the lives of the people who worked the freak show, I rely on histDrians, like Robert Bogdan, who have sifted through thousands of handbills, posters, newspaper articles, and promotional garbage used to create The Armless Wonder, The Wild Men of Borneo. In large part, I will never truly know their lives but can only use my imagi· nation, political sensibilities, and intuition to fill the holes between the outrageous headlines in The New York Times and other newspapers and the outrageous handbills sold at the carnival. The histDrians who moralii.e about the freak show frustrate me. These academics will take a detail, like the fact that Hiriam and Barney Davis's mother sold her sons to a showman, and use it to demonstrate just how despicable showmen could be and how oppressive the freak show was. The disturbing fact that many of the people who worked as freaks-disabled people from the 12 ANO PRIDE 79 United StateS as well as people from colonized countries-were sold into the business needs to be examined. The question, why were they sold, has to be asked. Certainly, in many cases, the answer must revolve around fear and hatred, undiluted ableism and racism, imperialism and capitalism. But consider Hiriam and Barney. They were sold for a wash pan full of gold and silver. What did that wash pan mean to their mother, Catherine Davis? My sources suggest, although don't explicitly state, that the Davises were a poor immigrant farm family. Did that gold and silver mean economic survival to Catherine Davis? What happened to working-class and poor disabled people who needed care but whose families could not provide it? The options did not abound: the almshouse, the street, the freak show. Rather than moralize and condemn, I want freak show historians to examine the whole context, including racism, ableism, and classism, and begin to build a complex understanding of exploitation. Like prostitutes, the people who worked as freaks-especially those who had some control over their own display-grasped an exploitative situation in an exploitative world and, as often as possible, turned it to their benefit. At the same time, the people who had the least power in the freak show-people from coloniz.ed countries and developmentally disabled people-underscore just how exploitative this institution could be. Many of the people of color brought to the U nited States died bleak deaths of pneumonia, pleurisy, or tuberculosis. They died on the long ship rides. They died wanting desperately to return to their home countries. They did not want to be part of the freak show; they never came to like the freak show; they didn't become showmen and ·women in their own right. Instead, the circus, the dime museum, the vaudeville act, the natural history museum were sites of one more atrocity in a long line of imperialist atrocities. Likewise, developmentally disabled people most frequently had no control over their displays. Some lacked the cognitive abilities to say yes or no to their own exhibition; others were simply trapped by unscrupulous managers, who typically were also their legal guardians. Although some developmentally disabled people had what appear tD be good and happy relationships with their 80 ELI CLARE EXILE managers, the dual role of showman and legal guardian is a set-up for exploitation. The display of both groups of people capitaliz.ed on the theory of the time that nondisabled people of color and developmentally disabled people embodied the missing link between primates and humans. Eminent zoologist Baron Georges Cuvier wrote in the early 1800s: The negro rare is confined to the south of Mount Atlas. Its characteristics are, black complexion, woolly hair, compressed craniwn, and flattish nose. In the prominence of the lower part of the face, and the thickness of the lips, it manifestly approaches the monkey tribe." Much the same was believed about developmentally disabled people. Following the same train of thought as Cuvier, German scientist Ca.rJ Vogt wrote in 1867 even more explicitly about evolutionary theory: Microcephalics [people with a type of developmental disability medically known as microcephalia] must necessarily represent an earlier developmental state of the hwnan being ... ; they reveal to us one of the milestones which the hwnan passed by during the course of his historical evolution. H The racism and ableism imbedded in these theories intersect jntensely in the exhibition of developmentally disabled people of color. Consider the story of two developmentally disabled siblings kidnapped as children from San Salvador. Called "Maxi.mo" and "Bartola," they were declared to be from "a long-lost rare of Aztecs." Scientists and anthropologists studied them; showmen displayed them. Both groups helped create and defend the "long-lost race" fabrication, anthropologists to substantiate their theories, showmen to make money, each feeding off the other. 'They used a variety of observations as their proof. They emphasized physical attributes associated with being disabled by microcephalia, particularly short stature and a slightly sloping skull. They took note of "Maximo's" and "Bartola's" dark skin and thick black hair. They made much of their subjects' language use and food preferences, citing the cultural differences between "civilized" white people and AND PRIDE 81 "barbaric" people of color. They exaggerated the specific cognitive abilitieefmabilities of "Maximo" and "Bartola." In short, these white, nondisabled men totally intertwined race and disability, racism and ableism, to create "their freaks." In one set of photos, "Maximo" and "Bartola" are stripped naked, posed against a blank wall I imagine scientists measuring the diameter of their skulls, the length of their legs, taking notes about their skin color and speech patterns, then snapping these pictures to add to their documentation. A second set of photos has them sitting against a stone wall. "Maximo" wears striped pants and a shirt with a big sun on its front. "Bartola's" dress has a zigzag design woven through it. Their hair is teased into big, wild afros. "Maximo" looks dazedly beyond the camera; "Bartola" looks down. I imagine showmen carefully arranging their props, calculating their profits. There are no complex or ambiguous answers here to the questions of power, control, and exploitation. During the freak show's heyday, today's dominant model of disability-the medical model-did not yet exist. This model defines disability as a personal problem, curable and/or treatable by the medical establishment. which in turn has led to the wholesale medicalization of disabled people. As theorist Michael Oliver puts it: Doctors are centrally involved in the lives of disabled people from the determination of whether a foetus is handicapped or not through to the deaths of old people from a variety of disabling conditions. Some of these involvements are, of course, entirely appropriate, as in the diagnosis of impairment. the stabilisation of medical condition after trawna, the treatment of illness occurring independent of disability, and the provision of physical rehabilitation. But doctors are also involved in assessing driving ability, prescribing wheelchairs, determining the allocation of financial benefits, selecting educational provision and measuring work capabilities and potential; in none of these cases is it irrunediately obvious that medical training and qualifications make doctors the most appropriate persons to be so involved." 6 2 ELI CLARE In the centuries before medicalization, before the 1930s and '40s when disability became a pathology and the exclusive domain of doctors and hospitals, the Christian western world had encoded disability with many different meanings. Disabled people. had sinned. We lacked moral strength. We were the spawn of the devil or the product of god's will. Our bodies/minds reflected events that happened during our mothers' pregnancies. At the time of the freak show, disabled people were no longer monsters in the minds of nondisabled people, but rather extraordinary creatures, not entirely human, about whom everyone-"professional" people and the general public alike-was curious. Doctors routinely robbed the graves of "giants" in order to measure their skeletons and place them in museums. Scientists scribed disabled people in terms like "female, belonging to the monocephalic, ileadelphic class of monsters by fusion," 16 language that came from the "science" of teratology, the centuries-old study of monsters. Anthropologists studied disabled people with an eye toward evolutionary theory. Rubes paid good money to gawk. Hiriam, did you ever swp mid-peifonnance, swp up there on your dime musewn platjonn and stare back, turningyour mild and direct gaze back on the rubes, gawking at the gawkm, entertained f?y your own audience? At the same time, there were signs of the move toward medicalization. Many people who worked as freaks were examirled by ·doctors. Often handbills included the testimony of a doctor who verified the "authenticity" of the "freak" and sometimes explruned the causes of his or her "freakishness." Tellingly doctors performed this role, rat.her than anthropologists, priests, or philosophers. But for the in which the freak show flourished, disability was not yet inextricably linked to pathology, and without pathology, pity and tragedy did not shadow disability to the same extent they do today. Consequently, the freak show fed upon neither of these, relying instead on voyeurism. The "armless wonder" played the fiddle on stage; the "giant" lived as royalty; the "savage" roared and screamed. These performances didn't create freaks as pitiful or tragic but as curious, odd, surprising, horrifying, wondrous. Freaks were not supercrips. They did not ovm:ome disability; they .flaunted EX ILE AND PRIDE 63 it. Nor were freaks poster children, the mod.em-day objects of pity, used to raise money on the telethon stage. Instead, the freaks flaunted, and the rubes gawked. In a culture that paired disability and curiosity, voyeurism was morally acceptable. Thus, people flocked without shame or compunction to see the freaks, primed by cultural beliefs about disability to be duped by the lies and fabrications created at the freak show. In the same way, cultural beliefs about race-notions about the wild savage, the noble savage, and an eagerness to see bothmade the exhibition of nondisabled people of color at the freak show and other venues extraordinarily profitable. Take for example the display of Filipino people at the 1904 World's Fair in St. Louis. The exhibit was billed as the "Igorot Village," complete with mostly naked women and men dancing wildly and eating dog stew. One among many "anthropological" displays at the Fair, the Village, as a near perfect representation of the wild savage, attracted by far the most Fair-goers and media attention. Christopher Vaughan in his article "Ogling Igorots" writes: The "civilized" Visayans, despite offering hourly theatrical and orchestral performances-concluding with "The Star Spangled Banner," SW1g in English by the entire village-went relatively ignored in comparison with the lgorots .. .. Gate receipts at the Igorot concession nearly quadrupled the total for the Visayans and tripled that of the colorful Moros." It was all too easy for white people to gawk at people of color, using the image of dog-eating savages from far-away "uncivilized" islands both to create and strengthen their sense of white identity and white superiority. During this same period of time, imperialism had intensified to a fevered pitch, both abroad in places like the Philippines and at home as white people continued to subjugate and destroy Native peoples and cultures. By the time of the 1904 World's Fair, the United States had won the Spanish-American War and gained control over the Philippines. In explaining his decision to solidify the United States' colonial rule there, President McKinley referred to "our civilizing mission." What better way to justify that mission, than to display Filipino people as uncivilized savages? 84 ELI CLl.RE This interplay between politics and the freak show also occurred on the national level. For instance, the missing-link evolutionary theory, used so profitably by showmen, supported slavery before Emancipation and the suppression of civil rights after. But the freak show didn't only use this ideology. The display of Black and white developmentally disabled people and nondisabled people of color as the "missing link" and the "What Is It?" actually bolstered the theory. The scientists and politicians could point to William Johnson and say, "See, here is living proof. Look at this creature." In doing so, they were reaffirming the less-than-human status of people of color and rationalizing much of their social and political policy. Simply put, the freak show both fed upon and gave fuel to imperialism, domestic racist politics, and the cultural beliefs about wild savages and white superiority. The decline of the freak show in the early decades of the 20th century coincided with the medicalization of disability. As pity, tragedy, and medical diagnosis/treatment entered the picture, the novelty and mystery of disability dissipated. Explicit stopped being socially acceptable except when controlled by the medical establishment. And later in the 20th century, as colonized people of color fought back successfully against their colonizers and as legal segregation in the United States ended and civil rights started to take hold, the exhibition of people of color also became unacceptable. Along with these changes came a scorn for the freak show as an oppressive institution from the bad old days. But I'm not so sure the freak show is all that dead. Consider Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Pena's performance piece "The Couple in the Cage," created in 1992 as part of 18 the "500 Years of Resistance" celebration. Fusco and GomezPefia costumed themselves in everything from fake leopard skins _!_O mirrored sunglasses and posed as natives from a newly discovered tribe. They toured natural history museums, art galleries, and street comers in a cage, performing the script of exotic and noble savages. In the long tradition of showmen and -women, they even EXILE AND PRIDE e !5 invented an island in the Gulf of Mexico from which they supposedly came and, as they toured, didn't let on to their ruse. Fusco and Gomez-Pena expected their audiences to immediately recognize the parody. Instead, as dorumented in a video shot at the scene of several performances,19 many people apparently took the ruse seriously. Some people expressed shock and disgust. Others, particularly white people, expounded on their theories about why Fusco paced back and forth, why Gomez-Pena grunted, staring out at the audience. Still others paid 50 cents for Polaroid pictures of the "savages" posed at their bars. Whether these people were serious, whether they all left the performance sites still duped, whether they truly believed their own theories, is not dear. But at least to some extent, it appears that "'The Couple in the Cage" easily replicated the relationship between rube and freak. suggesting that the old images of race cultivated by the freak show, rather than being dead, live astonishingly close to the surface. The scorn for the freak show also assumes that the bad old days were really awful, but I'm not so sure that they were in actuality all that bad for some of the "freaks." Llsten to the stories Robert Waldow and Violet and Daisy Hilton tell. All of them lived during the freak show's decline as medicalization took hold Robert Waldow, a tall man born in the 1920s, resisted becoming a giant, a freak. He wanted to be a lawyer, but unable to get the necessary education, he turned to shoe advertising. And later, after being pursued for years by showmen, he worked for the circus, earning a large salary and refusing to participate in the hype which would have made him appear taller than he really was. At the same time, doctors also pursued Robert, reporting him to be the tallest man in the world-this being medical hype, not circus hype. They refused to leave him alone. In 1936 a Dr. Charles Humberd showed up uninvited at the Waldow's home. Robert re_fused a physical exam and wouldn't cooperate with the interview. Humberd left disgruntled and the next year, unbeknownst to the W aldows, published an article in the journal of the American Medical Association called, "Giantism: A Case Study," in which Robert became a case study of a "preacromegalic giant." Because of the article, which cast him as a surly brute, Robert and his family were 86 ELI EXILE CLARI!: deluged with unwelcome attention from the media, the general public, and the medical establishment. In the biography The Gentleman Giant, Waldow's father reveals that Roben was far more disturbed and angered by his dealings with doctors than with showmen. Conjoined twins Daisy and Violet Hihon echo this reaction. These women worked the circus, carriival, and vaudeville circuits from the time they could talk. Early on, their abusive guardians controlled and managed the show. They v.iould lock Daisy and Violet away for days at a time to ensure that no one but rubes paying good money could see them. Later, after a court order freed the sisters, they performed on their own. The cover of one publicity pamphlet has Daisy playing the saxophone, Violet, the piano, and both of them smiling cheerfully at the viewer. Much of their lives they spent fighting poverty as the freak show's popularity waned. And yet in their autobiography, they write about "loath[ing] the very tone of the medical man's voice" and fearing that their guardians would "stop showing us on stage and let the doctors have us20 to punch and pinch and take our picture always. " Try telling Robert Waldow and the Hilton sisters how oppressive the freak show was, how enlightened the medical model of disability is, how bad the bad old days were. Try telling Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gomez-Pena that the freak show is truly dead. The end of the freak show meant the end of a particular kind of employment for the people who had worked as freaks._For nondisabled people of color from the United States, employment by the 1930s didn't hinge heavily on the freak show, and so its decline didn't have a huge impact. And for people from Africa, Asia, South and Central America, the Pacific islands, and the Caribbean, the decline meant only that white people had one less reason to come kidnap and buy people away from their homes. But for disabled people the end of the freak show almost guaranteed unemployment, disability often being codified into law as the inability to work. ANO PRIDE 87 In the '30s when Franklin Roosevelt's work programs employed many people, the federal government explicitly deemed disabled people unable to work, stamping their work applications "P.H. Physically handicapped. Substandard. Unemployable,'' sending them home with small monthly checks. The League of the Physically Handicapped protested in Washington, D.C., ocrupying the Work Progress Administration's offices, chanting, "We want jobs, not tin cups."21 ln this climate, as freak show jobs disappeared, many disabled people faced a world devoid of employment opportunities. Listen for instance to Otis Jordan, a disabled African-American man who works the Sutton Sideshow, one of the only remaining freak shows in the country, as "Otis the Frog Man." In 1984, his exhibit was banned from the New York State Fair when someone lodged a complaint about the indignities of displaying disabled people. Otis responded, "Hell, what does she [the woman who made the complaint] want from me-to be on welfare?" 22 Working as a freak may have been a lousy job, but nonetheless it was a job. III: Pride Now with this history in hand, can I explain why the word freak unsettles me, why I have not embraced this piece of disability history, this story of disabled people who earned their livings by flaunting their disabilities, this heritage of resistance, an in-yourface resistance similar to "We're here, we're queer, get used to it"? Why doesn't the word freak connect me easily and directly to subversion? The answer I think lies in the transition from freak show to doctor's office, from curiosity to pity, from entertainment to pathology. The end of the freak show didn't mean the end of our display or the end of voyeurism. W e simply traded one kind of freak.dam for another. Take for instance public stripping, the medical practice of stripping disabled children to their underwear and examining them in front of large groups of doctors, medical students, physical 88 EL I EX I LE CLAl'E therapists, and rehabilitation specialists. They have the back and forth They squeez.e her muscles. They watch his gait. muscle tension, footfall, back CUIVature. They take notes and talk among themselves about what surgeries and therapies they might recommend Since the invention of video cameras, they tape the sessions. They justify public stripping by saying it's a for students, a way for a team of professionals to pool knowledge. This isn't a medical practice of decades gone by. As recently as 1996, disability activist Lisa Blumberg reported in The .Disabili9' R.ag that "specialty" clinics (cerebral palsy clinics, spina ics, muscular dystrophy clinics, etc.) at a variety of teaching hospitals regularly schedule group-rather than private-eXaminations 24 and conduct surgery screenings in hospital amphitheaters. Excuse me, but isn't public stripping exactly what scientists and pologists did to "Maximo" and "Bartola" a cenwry ago? Tell me, what is the difference between the freak show and public ping? Which is more degrading? Which takes more control away from disabled people? Which lets a large group of nondisabled people gawk unabashedly for free? Today's freakdom happens in hospitals and doctors' offices. It happens during telethons as people fork CYVer money of the tragic stories milked until they're dry. It happens m . homes where severely disabled people are oft.en forced to live stops, on against their wills. It happens on street comers and at playgrounds and in restaurants. It happens when nondisabled people stare, uying to be covert, smacking their children to teach them how to pretend not to stare. A character in the play The Hidden Histmy of People with Disabilities juxtaposes the voyeurism of the freak show with the voyeurism of everyday life, saying: We're always on display. You think if I walked down the street of your stinking little nowhere town people wouldn t stare at me? Damn right they would, and tell their neighbors and and talk about me over dinners and picnics and PTA meetings. Well, if they want to do that, they're going to to pay me for that privilege. You want to stare at me, fine, 1t s 25 cents, cash on the barrel. You want a picture, that's another quarter. 1 ANO PR I CE My life story. Pay me. You think I'm being exploited? You pay to go to a baseball game, don't you?" Today's freakdom happens all the time, and we're not even paid for it. In fact disabled people have, as a group, an astounding unemployment rate of 71 percent.26 When we do "M>rk, we make 64 cents to a nondisabled workers' dollar.27 We don't control today's freakdom, unlike the earlier freak show freakdom, which sometimes we did. The presentation of disability today has been shaped entirely by the medical est.al; and the charity industry. That is, until the disability nghts movement came along. This civil rights and liberation movement established Centers for Independent Living all over the country, working to redefine the concept of independence. These centers offer support and advocacy, helping folks find ac.cessible and. attendants, funding for adaptive equipment and )Ob training. Independent living advocates measure independence not by how many tasks one can do without assistance, but by how much control a disabled person has over hWher life and by the quality of that life. . The movement founded direct-action, rabble-rousing groups, like AOAPT28 and Not Dead Yet, 29 that disrupt nursing home industry conventions, blockade non-ac.cessible public transportation, oa:upy the offices of politicians committed to the status quo, and protest .outside courtrooms. Disabled people have a history of dircct-act1on protest, beginning with the League of the Physically Handicapped's WPA protest. In 1977, disabled people occupied the HEW (Department of Health, Education, and Welfare) offices in San Francisco for 25 days, successfully pressuring politicians into signing Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, the first civil rights legislation in the United States for disabled people.30 And today, ADAPT is rabble-rousing hard, both on the streets and in Congress, to pass a national personal attendant services bill. 1:1e is creating a strong, politicized disability culture with a growing body of literature, performances, hwnor, theory: and political savvy. We have theater, poetry, anthologies, ficuon, magazines, art exhibits, film festivals, analysis and oiticism written by disabled folks, conferences, and a fledgling academic EL.I CL.A RE discipline called Disability Studies. At the same time, there are disabled people working to into mainstream culture, working to become models photographed for the big-name fashion magazines, actors in soap operas and sitcoms and Hollywood movies, recognized artists and writers and journalists. The movement lobbied hard for laws to end separate and unequal education, for comprehensive civil rights The l 990 Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) did not spnng from George Bush's head, fully formed and shaped by his understanding of disability issues. Rather lawyers schooled m disability rights and disabled White House appointees with a stake in disability politics crafted the bill, disability lobbyists educated and lobbied hard, and grassroots disability activists mobilized to get the ADA passed. In short the disability rights movement, founded in the same storm of social change as women's liberation and gay/lesbian liberation, riding on the energy and framework created by the Black liberation movement, came along and is undoing internalized oppression, making community, creating a culture and sense of identity, and organizing to change the status quo. These forces are taking freakdom back. declaring that disabled people will be at the center of defining disability, defining our lives, defining who we are and who we want to be. We are declaring that d0ctors and their pathology, rubes and their money, anthropologists and their theories, gawkers and their so-called nocuous intentions, bullies and their violence, showmen and their hype, Jerry Lewis and his telethon, government bureaucrats and their rules will no longer define us. To arrive as a self-<lefined people, disabled people, like other marginalized people, need a strong sense of identity. We need to know our history, come to understand which pieces of that history we want to make our own, and develop a self-image full of pride. The women and men who worked the freak show, the freaks who knew how to flaunt their disabilities-the tall man who wore a top hat to add a few inches to his height, the fat woman who refused to diet, the bearded woman who not only refused to shave, but grew her beard longer and longer, the developmentally disabled person who said, "I know EXILE ANO PRIDE QI you think I look like an ape. Here let me accentuate that look"can certainly teach us a thing or two about identity and pride. Pride is not an inessential thing. Without pride, disabled people are much more likely to accept unquestioningly the daily material conditions of ableism: unemployment, poverty, segregated and education, years spent locked up in nursing homes, perpetrated by caregivers, lack of access. Without pride, mdiVIdual and collective resistance to Qppression becomes nearly But pride is no easy thing to come by. Disability has been soaked m shame, dressed in silence, rooted in isolation. In 1969 in the backwoods of Oregon, I entered the "regular" first grade after a long struggle with the school officials who wanted me in "special education," a battle won only because I had scored well on an IQ test, my father knew the principal, and the first grade teacher, who lived upriver from us, liked my family and advocated for me. I became the first disabled kid to be mainstreamed the years later, the first laws requiring quality public for disabled kids, the Education for AU Handicapped Children Act and Section 504, were signed. By the mid- l 980s, mainstreaming wasn't a rare occurrence, even in small, rural schools, but in 1969 I was a first. No one-neither my family nor my teachers-knew how to acknowledge and meet my particuJar disability-related needs while letting me live a rather ordinary, rough-and-tumble childhood. They simply had no experience with a smart, gimpy six-year-old who learned to read quickly but had a hard time with the physical act of writing. who knew all the answers but whose speech was hard to In to resolve this tension, everyone ignored my disability and disability-related needs as much as possible. When I trouble handling a glass of water, tying my shoes, picking up coms, screws, paper clips, writing my name on the blackboard, no ? ne asked if I help. When I couldn't finish an assignment m the allotted time, teachers insisted I tum it in unfinished . When my classmates taunted me with rttard, monkey, defect, no one comforted me. I rapidly became the class outcast, and the adults left me to fend for myself. I took as much distance as I could from the kids in "special ed." I was determined not to be one of them. I Q2 EL.I wanted to be "normal," to pass as nondisabled, even though my shaky hands and slurred speech were impossible to ignore. Certainly I wasn't the only disabled person I knew. In Port Orford, many of the men had work-related disabilities: missing fingers. anns, and legs, broken backs, serious nerve damage. A good friend of my parents had diabetes. A neighbor girl, seven or eight years younger than me, had CP much like mine. My best friend's brother had severe mental retardation. And yet I knew no one with a disability, none of us willing to talk, each of us hiding as best we could. No single person underlines this ironic isolation better than Mary Walls, who joined my class in the fourth grade. She wore hearing aids in both ears and split her days between the "regular" and the "special ed" classrooms. We shared a speech therapist. I wish we had grown to be friends, but rather we became enemies, Mary calling me names and me chasing her down. I understand now that Mary lived by trying to read lips, and my lips. because of the way CP affects my speech, are nearly impossible to read. She probably taunted me out of frustration, and I chased her down, as I did none of my other bullies, because I could. I understand now about horizontal hostility: gay men and lesbians disliking bisexual people, transsexUal women looking down on drag queens, workingclass people fighting with poor people. Marginalized people from · many communities create their own internal tensions and hostilities, and disabled people are no exception. I didn't have a disabled friend until I was in my mid-20s, and still today all my close friends, the people I call "chosen family,'' are nondisabled. Often I feel like an impostor as I write about disability. feel that I'm not disabled enough, not grounded deeply enough in disability community, to put these words on paper. This is the legacy for me of shame, silence, and isolation. Pride works in direct opposition to internalized oppression. The latter provides fertile ground for shame, denial, self-hatred, and fear. The former encourages anger, strength, and joy. To transform self-hatred into pride is a fundamental act of resistance. In many communities, language becomes one of the arenas for this transformation. Sometimes the words of hatred and violence can EXILE AND PRIDE 93 be neutralized or even turned into the words of pride. To stare down the bully calling cripple, the basher swinging the word queer like a baseball bat. to say "Yeah, you're right. I'm queer, I'm a crip. So what?" undercuts the power of those who want us dead. Many social change movements have used language and naming specifically to create pride and power. In African-American communities, the progression from Coloml to Negro to Black both followed and helped give rise to the pride and anger that fueled the Civil Rights Movement. "Black is beautiful" became a powerful rallying cry for Black community and culture. But while the word Black so clearly connects itself to pride, the use of the word nigger among Black people causes much debate. For some, claiming that word with affection and humor rejects a certain kind of pain and humiliation, but for others, it simply reinforces those same feelings. The ugly words-far,got. queer. nigger, retard. cripple. freak--OJme highly charged with emotional and social history. Which of us can use these words to name our pride? The answer is not logical. Let me refute even the slightest suggestion that lesbian' gay/bi/trans people who hate the 'M>rd queer, disabled people who hate the words cripple and freak, Black people who hate the word nigger are trapped by their internalized That would be far too simple and neat Instead I want to follow a messier course, to examine the ways in which the ugly words we sometimes use to name our pride tap into a complex knot of personal and collective histories. I want to return to my original question: why does the word freak unsettle me? But even as I veer away from the simple and neat argument. the one centered upon the ways oppression can tum around and thrive in the bodies'minds of oppressed people, I must pull my self-hatred out of the bag. Even though the answer to my question about the word.freak is bigger than self-hatred, I need to stare down the self who wants to be "normal," the kid who thought she could and should pass as nondisabled, the crip still embarrassed by the way hec body moves. I can feel slivers of shame, silence, and isolation still imbedded deep in my body. I hate these fragments. In the last decade I've stretched into the joy of being a gimp among gimps. learning anger and subversion, coming to recognize the g4 ELI CLARE grace in a gnarly hand, tremor, rolling limp. raspy breath, finding comfort and camaraderie with disabled people. Yet I have not stretched far enough to imagine flaunting my CP, even though flaunting is a tool many disability activists use. They are in effect saying to nondisabled people, "Damn right, you better look. Look long and hard. Watch my crooked hobble, my twitching OOdy, my withered legs. Listen to my hands sign a language you don't even know. Notice my milky eyes I no longer hide behind sunglasses. Look at me straight on, because for all your years of gawking, you've still not seen me." Is flaunting the same as pride? I don't know. But I do know that every time I hear disabled people call themselves freaks, my decades-old self-hatred collides head-on with my relatively new-found pride. For me freak is defined by my personal experience of today's freakdom. Today's freakdom happened to me at Fairview State Hospital in l 965 when the doctors first declared me "retarded." I didn't yet talk arid was given an IQ test that relied not on verbal skills, but on fine motor coordination. And I-being a spastic little kid with CP-failed the test miserably. I simply couldn't manipulate their blocks, draw their pictures, or put their puzzles together. Today's freakdom happened every time I was taunted mard, monweirdo. It happens every time someone gawks, an occurrence that happens so regularly I rarely even notice. I don't see curious, puzzled, anxious-tum their heads to watch my trembling hands, my jerky movements. I don't see people strain to understand me, then decide it's impossible. Long ago I learned to block all those visual intrusions. I only know it happens because my friends notice and tell me. Yet I know I store the gawking in my bones. Today's freakdom happens every time some well-meaning stranger or acquaintance suggests a certain combination of vitamins, crystals, or New Age visualization techniques that she knows will cure my CP. I always want to retort, "Yeah right, like I'm lookinv for a cure. like mv brain cells that died some time before birth EX I LE AND PRIDE g5 In addition.freak is shadowed for me by the complicated collective history of exploitation and subversion at the freak show. I relish the knowledge that there have been people who have taken advantage of white people's and nondisabled people's urge to gawk. I love that disabled people at one time were paid to flaunt and exaggerate their disabilities. At the same time I hate how the freak show reinforced the damaging lies about disabled people and nondisabled people of color. I despise the racism, ableism, capitalism, and imperialism that had showmen buying and kidnapping people into the freak show. I rage at how few choices disabled people had. To infuse the word freak with pride, I would need to step through my personal history of freakdom into the larger collective history of the freak show. Stepping through the last slivers of my self-hatred, through the pain I've paired with gawking and the word retard, I could use Charles Stratton's strut, Ann Thompson's turning of the ordinary into the extraordinary, to strengthen my own resistance. I could name myself a freak alongside Daisy Hilton, William Johnson, and Otis Jordan. I want it to work. Instead the two histories collide in a madcap wheelchair race. My personal history isn't so easy to step through; the slivers tear my skin; the old familiar pain leaves me guarded and cautious. And the collective history is hard to reduce to a pure story of resistance and subversion that I want to celebrate and use. I keep thinking of the people who worked as "Ubangi Savages." Sure, Charles Stratton and Violet Hilton became showmen and -women; they took one set of exploitative conditions they were born into and another set of exploitative conditions associated with their work and subverted them as far as possible. But those African men and women, they were casualties of imperialism; their resistance, reflected in the sheer act of surviving the Ringling Brothers Circus, is not a resistance to celebrate, but one to mourn. This collision of histories leads me to think about the act of ELI CLARE bear witness to rather than incorporate into our pride? How does witness differ from pride? What do they share in common? To unravel the relationship of the word feaJc to pride and witness, let me step back for a moment, move to the word queer, to the gay/lesbiarv'bVtrans community. I think it no accident that I've paired the words queer and freak in this examination of language, pride, and resistance. The ways in which queer people and disabled people experience oppression follow, to a certain extent, parallel paths. Queer identity has been pathologiz.ed and medica,lized. Until 1973, homosexuality was considered a psychiatric disorder. Tcr day transsexuality and transgenderism, under the names of gender dysphoria and gender identity disorder, are considered psychiatric c.onditions. Queerness is all too frequently intertwined with shame, silence, and isolation. Queer people, particularly VWb't youth, often live rut off from other queer folk. alone in o ur schools, neighborhoods, and families of origin. Queer people deal with gawking all the time: when we hold hands in public, defy gender boundaries and norms, insist on recognition for our relationships and families. lntersexed people, transsexuals, and people who don't c.onform to gender norms-such as bearded women who grow their beards. have their own history at the freak show. Queer people have been told for centuries by church, state, and science that our bodies are abnormal. These parallel paths don't mean.that queer folk and disabled folk experience the same oppression; at many points the paths diverge. For example the gawkers often pity crips and beat up queers (although some crips do get beat up, and some queers, pitied). But the places of similarity, the fact that both peoples have been considered freaks of nature, push at the question of pride. How have VWb't people created pride? What are the words and the symbols of that pride? Qµeer has accomplished a number of things for the VWb't individuals and communities who have embraced it. The word names a reality. Yes, we are different; we are outsiders; we do not fit the dominant culture's definition of normal. Queer celebrates that differentness rather than hiding or denying it. By making queer EXILE ANO PRIDE 97 our own, it bec.omes less a bludgeon. We take a weapon away from the homophobes. Queer names a hugely diverse group of people. It brings dykes, faggots, bi's, and trannies in all our variation and difference and overlap under one roof; it is a coalition-building word. For some people the word works; for others it doesn't. The sa,me things can be said of the word crip in relationship to the disability community. All of this seems simple enough and is typically as far as the thinking about naming goes. But I want to push the thinking further. H ow do people who have lived in shame and isolation create community and pride? How do we even find each other? Let me turn here from the realm of words to the realm of symbol. The pink triangle has been used since the mid-'70s by VWb't people as a symbol to identify ourselves to each other and to the world. The Nazis originally used this symbol during the Holocaust to mark non-Jewish gay men on the streets and in the concentration camps just as the yellow star was used to mark Jews. 31 The pink triangle functions now as a symbol of identity, witness, and pride in queer communities. As a sign of identity, it c.ommunicates both covertly and overtly. That pink triangle graphic worn on a button or stuck on a bumper may not have much meaning to many straight people-particularly those not connected to or aware of queer culture-but among Vglb-'t people, especially in urban centers, it readily signals queer identity to other queer people. In this fashion, the pink triangle functions as an insider's language, a language attempting to include a marginalized people while excluding the oppressor. It is also used more overtly to speak of identity, sometimes inc.orporated into educational work about the historical oppression of gay people, other times into activist work. As a symbol of witness, it remembers and memorializ.es the gay men who died in the Holocaust. It keeps the memory of Nazi atrocities alive in our c.onsciousness. It serves as a reminder of the extremity of queer oppression. And as a symbol of pride, the pink triangle neutralizes and transforms hatred, following the same political path as the words queer, cripple, nigger. It is worn by out and proud queers. These functions-marking identity, expressing pride, insisting upon witness-go hand in hand, all Q8 EL.I EX IL E CL.ARE three important for any marginalized community. In our search for liberation, we can sometimes tum the language and symbols most closely reflecting our oppression into powerful expressions of pride. And yet that equation sometimes betrays history, blurring the dif. ference between witness and pride. As a symbol of pride, the pink triangle has frequently been divorced from its history. In one ahistorical explanation of this symbol, the owner of a Minneapolis gay bookstore tells his customers that pink triangles represent white gay merv'lesbians and black triangles-used by the Nazis to mark social deviants, including, it is assumed, lesbians, during the Holocaust-represent black gay merv'lesbians. Divorced from its history, the pink triangle becomes a consumerist symbol, used to sell t-shirts and keychains; it becomes a He. It is not and never will be the rainbow flag, which Gilbert Baker designed in 1978 specifically as a queer symbol full of unabashed pride and affirmation. To use the rainbow flag is to connect oneself to queer identity and pride as they are currently constructed. To use the pink triangle honestly is to connect oneself to history. I listen again to my Jewish dyke friends who don't understand the pink triangle as a symbol of pride. They ask me, "Why reclaim this symbol that has meant genocide? My family would never wear yellow stars joyfully as symbols of their pride, perhaps in witness and rage, but never in pride. Why then the pink triangle? How can it possibly be a symbol of pride?" Behind their words, I see the shadows of a collective history, the living reminders of numbers tattooed on forearms, the stories passed down of family and culture destroyed. Their questions and disbelief ask me to unwind the act of witness from the expression of pride. Both witness and pride strengthen identity, foster resistance, cultivate subversion. People who have lived in shame and isolation need all the pride we can m11.;:tPr nnt tn mirP 011r.-;pJvPs in :l narrowlv defined identitv POii- AND PRIDE with a determination to be visible. Witness demands primary adherence to and respect for history. Pride uses history as one of its many tools. Sometimes witness and pride work in concen, other times not. We cannot afford to confuse, merge, blur the two. And now I can come back to freak. The disabled people who use the word freak, are they, like many queer people, betraying witness in their creation of pride? A disabled person who names herself pridefully a freak draws on the history of freakdom and the freak show to strengthen her sense of resistance, to name a truth, to bolster her identity. But in using history this way, is she remembering only Ann Thompson, Violet Hilton, and the developmentally disabled girl who, while on display. took to swearing at the rubes? What about "Maximo" and "Bartola"? What about the nondisabled people of color who died at the freak show, desolate for their homelands? When we name ourselves freaks, are we forgetting the part of history that calls for witness, not pride? Are we blurring the two? How does the history of the freak show interact with the history of today's freakdom? How do our personal histories enter our collective history? If I had not intemaliz.ed nondisabled people's gawking to the point that I no longer notice it, if instead I felt pissy and uppity about it, would I be more able to imagine flaunting my CP? Would I be more willing to take the resistance of the people who worked as freaks as my own? Would I gladly use the word to acknowledge a simple truth: that the world considers me a freak? What about people disabled as adults, people who make it relatively smoothly through the first rounds of denial, grief, and rehab and maybe find the disability rights movement and disability community? They don't have a long personal history of freakdom. Hopefully shame, silence, and isolation haven't been buried deeply .i.. ..: .. .... \A/k,,t minht th.-ir rPbtinn.:hin tn thP hi<:tnrv nf thP 100 EL I CLA"lt probably differ from mine. What about developmentally disabled mean to them? Where is the pride in a people? What legacy of being owned by showmen who exhibited you as non-human? Again their relationships to freak show history are bound to differ from mine. I think of the disabled people I know who call themselves freaks. Many of them are performers, helping to build disability culture and/or working to break into mainstream culture. In using the namefreak, they claim freak show history both as disabled people and as showmen and -women. They shape pride out of a centuries-old legacy of performing on the street corner, at the open-air fair, in the palace and at the carnival as freak, monster, pet dwarf, court jest.fi, clown. On the other hand, could a disabled person whose personal history included public stripping but not performing as easily break through today's freakdom into that earlier freakdom? The history that for so long has placed us on stage, in front of audiences, sometimes in subversion and resistance, other times in loathing and shame, asks not only for pride, but also for witness as our many different personal histories come tangling into our collective one. This same profusion of histories exists in other communities. For instance, even though I, along with an entire community of dykes, faggots, bi's, and trannies, have made queer mine, the word holds intolerable grief and bitterness for many gay men and lesbians, bisexual and trans people. The effeminate boy who came out in the '50s. The dykes and queens caught in the pre-Stonewall police raids. The trans people with histories that include psychiatric abuse. The folks who can pass as straight and/or normatively gendered and choose do so, who yearn toward true assimilation, an end to differentness. I can't presume to know what relationships each of these people have with the word queer. How do their personal histories come crashing into the current, collectively defined calling out use of qiuer? The ugly words follow no logic, E XILE AND PRIDE I 0 I pieces of history, which kinds of humor, which words? Let me re· tum once more to my question, "Why queer and cripple but not freak?" This time I won't expect an answer. Instead. I want to take the image of Barney and Hiriam Davis's mild and direct gaze into the freak show camera and practice that stare when nondi.sabled people and straight people gawk at inc. I want to place RDbert Waldow's resistanre ;md Mercy Bump's outrage my lived knowledge that freakdom continues today. I want to remember that whether I call myselffreak or not, I share much with Ann Thompson and William Johnson, Otis Jordan and Daisy Hilton. I want to refigure the world, insisting that anthropologists never again construct lies like the ones they built around the bodies of "Maximo" and Bartola," that doctors never again publicly strip disabled children. I want to sharpen my pride on what strengthens me, my witness on what haunts me. Whatever we name ourselves, however we end up shattering our self-hatred, shame, silence, and isolation, the goal is the same; to end our daily material oppression. Essays and Speeches by Audre Lorde Notice This materia! may be protected by copyright law (Hie 17 U.S Code) San Francisco State University The Crossing Press / Freedom, CA 95019 The Crossing Press Feminist Series Uses of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power* THERE ARE MANY kinds of power, used and unused, acknowledged or otherwise. The erotic is a resource within each of us that lies in a deeply female and spiritual plane, firmly rooted in the power of our unexpressed or unrecognized feeling. In order to perpetuate itself, every oppression must corrupt or distort those various sources of power within the culture of the oppressed that can provide energy for change. For women, this has meant a suppression of the erotic as a considered source of power and information within our lives. We have been taught to suspect this resource, vilified, abused, and devalued within western society. On the one hand, the superficially erotic has been encouraged as a sign of female inferiority; on the other hand, women have been made to suffer and to feel both contemptible and suspect by virtue of its existence. It is a short step from there to the false belief that only by the suppression of the erotic within our lives and consciousness can women be truly strong. But that strength is illusory, for it is fashioned within the context of male models of power. As women, we have come to distrust that power which rises from our deepest and nontational knowledge. We have been warned against it all our lives by the male world, which values • Paper delivered at the Fourth Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, Mount Holyoke College. August 25, 1978. Published as a pamphlet by Out & Out Books (available from The Crossing Press). 53 54 SISTER OUTSIDER this depth of feeling enough to keep women around in order to exercise it in the service of men, but which fears this same depth too much to examine the possibilities of it within themselves. So women are maintained at a distantlinferior position to be psychically milked, much the same way ants maintain colonies of aphids to provide a life-giving substance for their masters. But the erotic offers a well of replenishing and provocative force to the woman who does not fear its revelation, nor succumb to the belief that sensation is enough. The erotic has often been misnamed by men and used against women. It has been made into the confused, the trivial, the psychotic, the plasticized sensation. For this reason, we have often turned away from the exploration and consideration of the erotic as a source of power and information, confusing it with its opposite, the pornographic. But pornography is a direct denial of the power of the erotic, for it represents the suppression of true feeling. Pornography emphasizes sensation without feeling. The erotic is a measure between the beginnings of our sense of self and the chaos of our strongest feelings. It is an internal sense of satisfaction to which, once we have experienced it, we know we can aspire. For having experienced the fullness of this depth of feeling and recognizing its power, in honor and self-respect we can require no less of ourselves. It is never easy to demand the most from ourselves, from our lives, from our work. To encourage excellence is to go beyond the encouraged mediocrity of our society is to encourage excellence. But giving in to the fear of feeling and working to capacity is a luxury only the unintentional can afford, and the unintentional are those who do not wish to guide their own destinies. This internal requirement toward excellence which we learn from the erotic must not be misconstrued as demanding the impossible from ourselves nor from others. Such a demand incapacitates everyone in the process. For the erotic is not a question only of what we do; it is a question of how acutely and fully we can feel in the doing. Once we know the extent to which we are capable of feeling that sense of satisfaction and completion, USES OF THE EROTIC we can then observe which of our various life endeavors bring us closest to that fullness. The aim of each thing which we do is to make our lives and the lives of our children richer and more possible. Within the celebration of the erotic in all our endeavors, my work becomes a conscious decision a longed-for bed which I enter gratefully and from which I rise up empowered. Of course, women so empowered are dangerous. So we are taught to separate the erotic demand from most vital areas of our lives other than sex. And the lack of concern for the erotic root and satisfactions of our work is felt in our disaffection from so much of what we do. For instance, how often do we truly love our work even at its most difficult? The principal horror of any system which defines the good in terms of profit rather than in terms of human need, or which defines human need to the exclusion of the psychic and emotional components of that need - the principal horror of such a system is that it robs our work of its erotic value, its erotic power and life appeal and fulfillment. Such a system reduces work to a travesty of necessities, a duty by which we earn bread or oblivion for ourselves and those we love. But this is tantamount to blinding a painter and then telling her to improve her work, and to enjoy the act of painting. It is not only next to impossible, it is also profoundly cruel. As women, we need to examine the ways in which our world can be truly different. I am speaking here of the necessity for reassessing the quality of all the aspects of our lives and of our work, and of how we move toward and through them. The very word erotic comes from the Greek word eros, the personification of love in all its aspects - born of Chaos, and personifying creative power and harmony. When I speak of the erotic, then, I speak of it as an assertion of the lifeforce of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our work, our lives. There are frequent attempts to equate pornography and eroticism, two diametrically opposed uses of the sexual. Because 56 SISTER OUTSIDER of these attempts, it has become fashionable to separate the spiritual (psychic and emotional) from the political, to see as contradictory or antithetical. "What do you mean, a poetic revolutionary, a meditating gunrunner?" In the same way, we have attempted to separate the spiritual and the erotic, thereby reducing the spiritual to a world of flattened affect, a world of the ascetic who aspires to feel nothing. But nothing is farther from the truth. For the ascetic position is one of the highest fear, the gravest immobility. The severe abstinence of the ascetic becomes the ruling obsession. And it is one not of self-discipline but of self-abnegation. The dichotomy between the spiritual and the political is also false, resulting from an incomplete attention to our etotic knowledge. For the bridge which connects them is formed by the erotic - the sensual - those physical, emotional, and psychic expressions of what is deepest and strongest and richest within each of us, being shared: the passions of love, in its deepest meanings. Beyond the superficial, the considered phrase, "It feels right to me," acknowledges the strength of the erotic into a true knowledge, for what that means is the first and most powerful guiding light toward any understanding. And understanding is a handmaiden which can only wait upon, or clarify, that knowledge, deeply born. The erotic is the nurturer or nursemaid of all our deepest knowledge. The erotic functions for me in several ways, and the first is in providing the power which comes from sharing deeply any pursuit with another person. The sharing of joy, whether physical, emotional, psychic, or intellectual, forms a bridge between the sharers which can be the basis for understanding much of what is not shared between them, and lessens the threat of their difference. Another important way in which the erotic connection functions is the open and fearless underlining of my capacity for joy. In the way my body stretches to music and opens into response, hearkening to its deepest rhythms, so every level upon which I sense also opens to the erotically satisfying experience, whether it is dancing, building a bookcase, writing a poem, examining an idea. That self-connection shared is a measure of the joy which I know myself to be capable of feeling, a reminder of my capacity for feeling. And that deep and irreplaceable knowledge of my capacity for joy comes to demand from all of my life that it be lived within the knowledge that such satisfaction is possible, and does not have to be called marriage, nor god, nor an afterlife. This is one reason why the erotic is so feared, and so often relegated to the bedroom alone, when it is recognized at all. For once we begin to feel deeply all the aspects of our lives, we begin to demand from ourselves and from our life-pursuits that they feel in accordance with that joy which we know ourselves to be capable of. Our erotic knowledge empowers us, becomes a lens through which we scrutinize all aspects of our existence, forcing us to evaluate those aspects honestly in terms of their relative meaning within our lives. And this is a grave responsibility, projected from within each of us, not to settle for the convenient, the shoddy, the conventionally expected, nor the merely safe. During World War II, we bought sealed plastic packets of white, uncolored margarine, with a tiny, intense pellet of yellow coloring perched like a topaz just inside the clear skin of the bag. We would leave the margarine out for a while to soften, and then we would pinch the little pellet to break it inside the bag, releasing the rich yellowness into the soft pale mass of margarine. Then taking it carefully between our fingers, we would knead it gently back and forth, over and over, until the color had spread throughout the whole pound bag of margarine, thoroughly coloring it. I find the erotic such a kernel within myself. When released from its intense and constrained pellet, it flows through and colors my life with a kind of energy that heightens and sensitizes and strengthens all my experience. We have been raised to fear the yes within ourselves, our deepest cravings. But, once recognized, those which do not enhance Our future lose their power and can be altered. The fear of our desires keeps them suspect and indiscriminately powerful, for to 58 SISTER OUTSIDER suppress any truth is to give it strength beyond endurance. The fear that we cannot grow beyond whatever distortions we may find within ourselves keeps us docile and loyal and obedient, externally defined, and leads us to accept many facets of our oppression as women. When we live outside ourselves, and by that I mean on external directives only rather than from our internal knowledge and needs, when we live away from those erotic guides from within ourselves, then our lives are limited by external and alien forms, and we conform to the needs of a structure that is not based on human need, let alone an individual's. But when we begin to live from within outward, in touch with the power of the erotic within ourselves, and allowing that power to inform and illuminate our actions upon the world around us, then we begin to be responsible to ourselves in the deepest sense. For as we begin to recognize our deepest feelings, we begin to give up, of necessity, being satisfied with suffering and self-negation, and with the numbness which so often seems like their only alternative in our society. Our acts against oppression become integral with self, motivated and empowered from within. In touch with the erotic, I become less willing to accept powerlessness, or those other supplied states of being which are not native to me, such as resignation, despair, self-effacement, depression, self-denial. And yes, there is a hierarchy. There is a difference between painting a back fence and writing a poem, but only one of quantity. And there is, for me, no difference between writing a good poem and moving into sunlight against the body of a woman I love. This brings me to the last consideration of the erotic. To share the power of each other's feelings is different from using another's feelings as we would use a kleenex. When we look the other way from our experience, erotic or otherwise, we use rather than share the feelings of those others who participate in the experience with us. And use without consent of the used is abuse. In order to be utilized, our erotic feelings must be recognized. The need for sharing deep feeling is a human need. But within USES OF THE EROTIC 59 the european-american tradition, this need is satisfied by certain proscribed erotic comings-together. These occasions are almost always characterized by a simultaneous looking away, a pretense of calling them something else, whether a religion, a fit, mob violence, or even playing doctor. And this misnaming of the need and the deed give rise to that distortion which results in pornography and obscenity - the abuse of feeling. When we look away from the importance of the erotic in the development and sustenance of our power, or when we look away from ourselves as we satisfy our erotic needs in concert with others, we use each other as objects of satisfaction rather than share our joy in the satisfying, rather than make connection with our similarities and our differences. To refuse to be conscious of what we are feeling at any time, however comfortable that might seem, is to deny a large part of the experience, and to allow ourselves to be reduced to the pornographic, the abused, and the absurd. The erotic cannot be felt secondhand. As a Black lesbian feminist, I have a particular feeling, knowledge, and understanding for those sisters with whom I have danced hard, played, or even fought. This deep participation has often been the forerunner for joint concerted actions not possible before. But this erotic charge is not easily shared by women who continue to operate under an exclusively european-american male tradition. I know it was not available to me when I was trying to adapt my consciousness to this mode of living and sensation. Only now, I find more and more women-identified women brave enough to risk sharing the erotic's electrical charge without having to look away, and without distorting the enormously powerful and creative nature of that exchange. Recognizing the power of the erotic within our lives can give us the energy to pursue genuine change within our world, rather than merely settling for a shift of characters in the same weary drama. For not only do we touch our most profoundly creative source, but we do that which is female and self-affirming in the face of a racist, patriarchal, and anti-erotic society. selections from Kindling, by Aurora Levins Morales http://www.auroralevinsmorales.com/excerpts-from-kindling.html “As I do the work… bringing all my heart and intelligence and skill to the task, I am bringing richness to the common soil we cultivate, pouring my unique combination of nutrients into the ground of our future well-being… I need my resources to flow from the rim of the future, from people who are nourished by what I bring and want to nourish me back.” Please visit http://www.auroralevinsmorales.com/the-village-it-takes.html to become part of the village it takes to support Aurora’s life and work. p. 9-10, Mountain Moving Day “There is no neutral body from which our bodies deviate. Society has written deep into each strand of tissue of every living person on earth. What it writes into the heart muscles of five star generals is distinct from what it writes in the pancreatic tissue and intestinal tracts of Black single mothers in Detroit, of Mexicana migrants in Fresno, but no body stands outside the consequences of injustice and inequality..... What our bodies, my mother’s and yours and mine, require in order to thrive, is what the world requires. If there is a map to get there, it can be found in the atlas of our skin and bone and blood, in the tracks of neurotransmitters and antibodies. We need nourishment, equilibrium, water, connection, justice. When I write about cancer and exhaustion and irritable bowels in the context of the treeless slopes of my homeland, of market driven famine, of xenoestrogens and the possible extinction of bees, I am tracing that map with my fingertips, walking into the heart of the storm that shakes my body and occupies the world. As the rising temperature of the planet births bigger and more violent hurricanes from the tepid seas, I am watching the needle of my anger swing across its arc, locating meridians, looking for the magnetic pulse points of change. When I can hold the truth of my flesh as one protesting voice in a multitude, a witness and opponent to what greed has wrought, awareness becomes bearable, and I rejoice in the clarity that illness has given me.” p. 163, Drifting To Bottom “I settle into the bed of passive sex like a leaf descending to the bottom of a pond, all of me liquid, languid, slow, luminous, still. Once I was tigerish, licking, biting, pouncing, growling, tumbling, arched, riding the springy ribcages and hips of lovers I could climb on. Now I have sex as plants do, petals agape for pollen; as snails do, one sticky wet part sliding softly, infinitesimally across another. I have sex like a body of water, breath making nipples rise like the crests of waves, creeks emptying into my shimmering state of awareness through crevices, gullies, hillside torrents. Rocking against the coast, tide by tide. Now I am infinite earth, potent beyond all things and nearly motionless. Sex is a bead of sweat, dew forming on the curve of a leaf, a thigh. Sex is the quiver of grass on an almost windless day. I am a bed of clay on which your fingers drum like rain, furrowed by your tongue, penetrated by roots that grow strong because of me. I am the sea anemone, exquisitely sensitive and anchored to rock. My most delicate pink-tipped tentacles suck, clutch, cling to what touches them. I change color, rose to maroon to violet, blush, glow, burn, circle and dance in the water, wrap myself all around what comes within my one inch reach, and never lift myself up from my stony bed. I am held down by tired muscles, topped by my own fatigue, nerve endings tingling with sensations, too exhausted to move, lickable, liquid, languid, sinking into the slick, soft mud, coming down from above, drifting to bottom.” p. 165-167, Listen, Speak “1. Come. You. Yes, you. Tonight we are gathering stories, ours, yours. Each of us with our bundles of sticks, each of us with our strands of cord. The word in your pocket is what we need. The song in your heart, the callous on your heel. Come into the clearing. Bring your tinder. Together, we will strike sparks and set the night ablaze. Come out of the forest, the woodwork, the shadows to this place of freedom, quilombo, swamp town, winter camp, yucayeque, where those not meant to survive laugh and weep together, share bread from mouth to mouth, pass cups of water, break bread--and let our living bodies speak. Come with your triggers, your losses, your scars. When something you hear, something you see, makes your wounds ache and throb, it’s only memory rising, a piece of our history. Bring it into the circle. We will hold it together. … 2. Open up. Make room. Let the circle grow. From the shadows steps a man of Tuskeegee, syphilis raging untreated through his veins, gone blind, lame and speechless while white doctors took notes, but here he speaks with a voice like a drum. At the light’s edge a girl with no face, who lived ten years locked in a room, holds the hand of an old man with no relatives, and blue numbers tattooed on his arm. Trace the lines in the maps of our bodies. They run like furrows, side by side. They move like rivers, enter each other, make tributaries and forks. Make room for the children raised on locked wards under a flickering fluorescent light, the shocked and injected, the measured and displayed, tormented, fondled, drugged, called defective. Their small blunt faces look out from sterile hallways, grey buildings, medical case files, toward the fire that we become. They come wheeling and hobbling over thick tree roots, to sit by the flames, cry out in childish voices, for water, for hands to hold, for us to listen as they give themselves new names. We unwrap our tongues, we bind our stories, we choose to be naked, we show our markings, we lick our fingers, we stroke our bellies, we laugh at midnight, we change the ending, we begin, and begin again.” Citations Berne, Patty. “Sins Invalid: Disability, Dancing and Claiming Beauty,” in Telling Stories to Change the World, edited by Rickie Solinger, Madeline Fox, and Kayhan Irani. New York: Routledge, 2008. Clare, Eli. “Freaks and Queers.” Exile And Pride: Disability, Queerness And Liberation. Cambridge MA: South End Press, 1999. 81-118. Hershey, Laura. “You Get Proud by Practicing.” Accessed January 28, 2014. http://www.cripcommentary.com/poetry.html#PROUD. Johnson, Cyree Jarelle. “Disease Is Not A Metaphor.” Accessed February 10, 2014. http://www.blackgirldangerous.org/2013/07/2013729disease-isnot-a-metaphor/. Levins Morales, Aurora. Kindling. Cambridge MA: Palabrera Press, 2013. Lorde, Audre. “Uses Of the Erotic: The Erotic as Power.” Sister Outsider. Freedom CA: The Crossing Press, 1984. McRuer, Robert. “Disabling Sex: Notes for a Crip Theory of Sexuality,” GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, 17.1 (2010): 107-117, p. 114. Taylor, Sonya Renee. “The Body is Not an Apology.” Accessed January 28, 2014. http://www.sonya-renee.com/#!watch. Withers, AJ. “Looking Back but Moving Forward: The Radical Disability Model,” in Disability Politics & Theory. Halifax and Winnipeg: Fernwood Publishing, 2012.