On Being Transminded: Disabling Achievement, Enabling Exchange

Authors

  • Anne Dalke Term Professor of English and Gender Studies, Bryn Mawr College
  • Clare Mullaney Graduate Student, Dept. of English, University of Pennsylvania

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18061/dsq.v34i2.4247

Keywords:

academia, dis/ability, disability studies, education, feminism, identity studies, mad pride, mad studies, mental health, mental illness, queer studies, temporality, women's colleges

Abstract

We write collaboratively, as a recent graduate and long-time faculty member of a small women’s liberal arts college, about the mental health costs of adhering to a feminist narrative of achievement that insists upon independence and resiliency.  As we explore the destabilizing potential of an alternative feminist project, one that invites different temporalities in which dis/ability emerges and may be addressed, we work with disability less as an identity than as a generative methodology, a form of relation and exchange. Mapping our own college as a specific, local site for the disabling tradition of “challenging women,” we move to larger disciplinary and undisciplining questions about the stigma of mental disabilities, traversing the tensions between institutionalizing disability studies and the field’s promise of destabilizing the constrictions of normativity.

Keywords: academia, dis/ability, disability studies, education, feminism, identity studies, mad pride, mad studies, mental health, mental illness, queer studies, temporality, women’s colleges


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Published

2014-03-18

How to Cite

Dalke, A., & Mullaney, C. (2014). On Being Transminded: Disabling Achievement, Enabling Exchange. Disability Studies Quarterly, 34(2). https://doi.org/10.18061/dsq.v34i2.4247