Critical Disability Studies and Mad Studies: Enabling new Pedagogies in Practice
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.56105/cjsae.v29i1.5357Keywords:
Critical Disability Studies, Mad Studies, Critical Pedagogy, Higher EducationAbstract
I draw theoretically on the works of critical pedagogues to unpack my instructor experiences developing and teaching critical disability studies (CDS) and Mad studies in university contexts. My intent is to insert CDS and Mad pedagogies into the literature in adult education, where such discourses have been and continue to be absent from critical pedagogy in general and from teacher education more specifically. In this paper, I offer a critique of the absence of CDS and Mad studies‐informed approaches and perspectives in critical pedagogy in ways that may inform adult education. CDS and Mad studies can also help us to unpack the often ableist and sanist nature of Canadian teacher education.
References
AUTHOR, (2014). ---Name Removed---
Anderson, R.C. (2006). Teaching (with) disability: Pedagogies of lived experience. The Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, 28, 367-379.
Baglieri, S., & Shapiro, A. (2012). Disability Studies and the inclusive classroom critical practices for creating least restrictive attitudes. New York: Routledge.
Beckett, A.E. (2015). Anti-oppressive pedagogy and disability: possibilities and challenges. Scandinavian Journal of Disability Research, 17(1), 76-94.
Beresford, P. (2000): What Have Madness and Psychiatric System
Survivors Got to Do with Disability and Disability Studies?,Disability & Society, 15(1),167-172.
Beresford, P. & Russo, J. (2016). Supporting the sustainability of Mad Studies and preventing its co-option. Disability & Society, 1-5.
Burstow, B. (2003). From pills to praxis: Psychiatric survivors and adult education. The Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, 17(1), 1-18.
Church, K., & Landry, D. (In press). Teaching (like) crazy in a mad positive school: Exploring the charms of recursion.
Church, K. (in press) “It’s complicated”: Blending disability and mad studies in the corporatizing university. In H. Spandler, J. Anderson, and B. Sapey (Eds.) Madness, distress and the politics of disablement. Bristol, UK: Policy Press.
Danforth, S., & Gabel, S.L. (2006). Vital questions facing disability studies in education. New York: Peter Lang.
Erevelles, N. (2000). Educating unruly bodies: Critical pedagogy, disability studies, and the politics of schooling. Educational Theory, 50(1), 25-48.
Erevelles, N. (2005). Rewriting critical pedagogy from the periphery: Materiality, disability and the politics of schooling. In Disability Studies in Education. Readings in theory and method, edited by S.L. Gabel, 65-84. New York: Peter Lang.
Foucault, M. (1995). 2nd edition. Discipline and Punish: The birth of the prison. New York: Vintage Books.
Foucault, M. (2007). The Politics of Truth. Los Angeles, CA: Semiotext(e).
Frances, A. (2014). Saving normal: An insider’s revolt against out –of-control psychiatric diagnosis, DSM-5, big pharma, and the medicalization of ordinary life. New York: William Morrow.
Freire, P. (2009). Pedagogy of the oppressed. New York: Continuum.
Fritsch, K. (2015). Desiring disability differently: Neoliberalism, heterotopic imagination and intra-corporeal reconfigurations. Foucault Studies, 19, 43-66.
Gabel, S.L. (2001). “I wash my face with dirty water”: Narrative of disability and pedagogy. Journal of Teacher Education, 52, 31-47.
Gabel, S. (2002). Some conceptual problems with critical pedagogy. Curriculum Inquiry, 32(2), 177-201.
Gibson, S. (2012). Narrative accounts of university education: sociocultural perspectives of students with disabilities. Disability & Society, 27(3), 353-369.
Giroux, H.A. (2003). Public pedagogy and the politics of resistance: notes on a critical theory of educational struggle. Educational Philosophy and Theory, 35(1), 5-16.
Goodley, D. (2007). Towards socially just pedagogies: Deleuzoguattarian critical disability studies. International Journal of Inclusive Education, 11(3), 317-334.
Goodley, D. (2012). Dis/entangling critical disability studies. Disability & Society, 1-14.
Goodley, D. (2014). Dis/ability studies: Theorising disablism and ableism. New York: Routledge.
Grace, A. (2013). Lifelong learning as critical action: International perspectives on people, politics, policy, and practice. Toronto: Canadian Scholars’ Press Inc.
Hulgin, K.M., O’Connor, S. Fitch, E.F., & Gutsell, M. (2014). Disability Studies pedagogy: Engaging dissonance and meaning making. Review of Disability Studies, 7(3-4), 52-66.
hooks, B. (1994). Teaching to transgress: Education as the practice of freedom. New York: Routledge.
Jones, H.S. (2005). Autoethnography: Making the personal political. In Denzin, S.K. and Lincoln, Y.S. (Eds.) the sage handbook of qualitative methods. 3rd Edition. Chapter 30 pp.763-792. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Knoll, K. R. (2009). Feminist disability studies pedagogy. Feminist Teacher, 19(2), 122-133.
Kumashiro, K.K. (2000). Toward a theory of anti-oppressive education. Review of Educational Research 70(1), 25-53.
Kumashiro, K.K. (2002). Troubling education. New York: Routledge Falmer.
Liasidou, A. (2013). Intersectional understandings of disability and implications for a social justice reform agenda in education policy and practice. Disability & Society, 28(3), 299-312.
Liasidou, A. (2014). Critical disability studies and socially just change in higher education. British Journal of Special Education, 41(2), 120-134.
Linton, S., Mello, S., & O’Neill, J. (1995). Disability studies: Expanding the parameters of diversity. Radical Teacher, 47, 4-10.
Marks, D. (1999). Disability: Controversial debates and psychosocial perspectives. London: Routledge.
Meekosha, H. & Shuttleworth, R. (2009). What’s so ‘critical’ about critical disability studies? Australian Journal of Human Rights, 15(1), 47-76.
Michalko, R. (2008). Double trouble: Disability and dis- ability studies in education. In Disability and the politics of education: An international reader. (pp.401-416). Eds. Gabel, S., and Danforth, S. New York: Peter Lang.
McLean, M.A. (2008). Teaching about disability: an ethical responsibility? International Journal of Inclusive Education, 12(5-6), 605-619.
McRuer, R. (2006). Crip theory: Cultural signs of queerness and disability. New York: New York University Press.
Nesbit, T. (2011). Canadian adult education: Still a movement. Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 37(1), 1-13.
Nesbit, T., Brigham, S., Taber, N., & Gibb, T. (Eds.). (2013). Building on critical traditions: Adult education and learning in Canada. Toronto. Thompson Educational Publishing.
Nocella, A.J. (2008). Emergence of disability pedagogy. Journal for Critical Education Policy Studies, 6(2), 77-94.
Opini, B. (2016). Walking the talk: towards a more inclusive field of disability studies. International Journal of Inclusive Education, 20(1), 67-97.
Patterson, J., Hogan, J., & Willis, H. (2008). Vision, passion, action: Reflections on learning to do disability studies in the classroom and beyond. Disability Studies Quarterly, 28(4).
Pfeiffer, D., & Yoshida, K. (1995). Teaching Disability Studies in Canada and the USA. Disability & Society, 10(4), 475-500.
Price, M. (2014). Mad at school: Rhetorics of mental disability and academic life. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press.
Reville, D. (2013). Is mad studies emerging as a new field of inquiry? In B. A. LeFrançois, R. Menzies, and G. Reaume (Eds.). Mad matters: A critical reader in Canadian Mad Studies. Toronto: CSPI.
Rice, N. (2006). Promoting ‘Epistemic Fissures’: Disability studies in teacher education. Teacher Education, 17(3), 251-264.
Rose, N. (1979). The psychological complex: mental measurement and social administration. Ideology & consciousness, 4, 5-68.
Rose, N. (1998). Inventing our selves: Psychology, power, and personhood. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
Rose, N. (1999). Governing the soul: The shaping of the private self. 2nd Ed. London: Free association books.
Russo, J. & Beresford, P. (2015). Between exclusion and colonization: Seeking a place for mad people’s knowledge in academia. Disability & Society, 30(1), 153-157.
Selman, G., & Selman, M. (2009). The life and death of the Canadian adult education movement. Canadian Journal of University Continuing Education, 35(2), 13–28.
Slee, R. (2004). Meaning in the service of power. In L. Ware (Ed.), Ideology and the politics of in/exclusion (pp. 46- 58). New York: Peter Lang.
Slee, R. (2011). The irregular school: Exclusion, schooling and inclusive education. New York: Routledge.
Taylor, S.J. (2011). Disability Studies in Higher Education. New Directions for Higher Education, 154, 93-98.
Thompson, S.A. (2012). Thrice disabling disability: enabling inclusive, socially just teacher education. International Journal of Inclusive Education, 16(1), 99-117.
Titchkosky, T. (2011). The question of access: Disability, space, meaning. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Titchkosky, T. (2012). The ends of the body as pedagogic possibility. The Review of Education, Pedagogy, and Cultural Studies, 34, 82-93.
Ware, L. P. (2002). A moral conversation on disability: Risking the personal in educational contexts. Hypatia, 17(3), 143-172.
Whitaker, R. (2010). Anatomy of an epidemic: Magic bullets, psychiatric drugs, and the astonishing rise of mental illness in America. New York: Broadway books.
Young, S. (2014). I’m not your inspiration, thank you very much. Retrieved online: www.ted.com
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Authors of manuscripts accepted for publication will be required to assign copyright to the Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education/L’Association canadienne pour l’étude de l’éducation des adultes (CJSAE). CJSAE requests that, as the creator(s)/author(s) of the manuscript your are submitting assign certain rights to the manuscript to the CJSAE in exchange for undertaking to publish the article in print and electronic form and, in general, to pursue its dissemination throughout the world. The rights the CJSAE requests are:
- The right to publish the article in print and electronic form or in any other form it may choose that is in keeping with its role as a scholarly journal with the goal of disseminating the work as widely as possible;
- The right to be the sole publisher of the article for a period of 12 months;
- The right to make the article available to the public within a period of not more than 24 months, as determined by relevant journal staff of the CJSAE;
- The right to grant republication rights to itself or others in print, electronic, or any other form, with any revenues accrued to be shared equally between the author(s) and the journal;
- The right to administer permission to use portions of the article as requested by others, seeking recompense when the CJSAE sees it as warrented;
- The right to seek or take advantage of opportunities to have the article included in a database aimed at increasing awareness of it;
- As the author(s), the CJSAE wishes you to retain the right to republish the article, with acknowledgement of the CJSAE as the original publisher, in whole or in part, in any other pbulication of your own, including any anthology that you might edit with up to three others;
- As the author(s), the CJSAE withes you to retain the right to place the article on your personal Web page or that of your university or institution. The CJSAE askes that you include this notice: A fully edited, peer-reviewed version of this article was first published by the Canadian Journal for the Study of Adult Education, <Year>, <Volume>, <Issue>, <Page Numbers>.
BY AGREEING TO THE FOREGOING, YOU CONFIRM THAT THE MANUSCRIPT YOU ARE SUBMITTING HAS NOT BEEN PUBLISHED ELSEWHERE IN WHOLE OR IN PART, AND THAT NO AGREEMENT TO PUBLISH IS OUTSTANDING.
SHOULD THE ARTICLE CONTAIN MATERIAL WHICH REQUIRES WRITTEN PERMISSION FOR INCLUSION, YOU AGREE THAT IT IS YOUR OBLIGATION IN LAW TO IDENTIFY SUCH MATERIAL TO THE EDITOR OF THE CJSAE AND TO OBTAIN SUCH PERMISSION. THE CJSAE WILL NOT PAY ANY PERMISSION FEES. SHOULD THE CJSAE BE OF THE OPINION THAT SUCH PERMISSION IS NECESSARY, IT WILL REQUIRE YOU TO PURSUE SHUCH PERMISSSION PRIOR TO PUBLICATION.
AS AUTHOR(S), YOU WARRANT THAT THE ARTICLE BEING SUBMITTED IS ORIGINAL TO YOU.
Provided the foregoing terms are satisfactory, and that you are in agreement with them, please indicate your acceptance by checking the appropriate box and proceed with your submission.
This copyright agreement was extracted with permission from the "Best practices guide to scholarly journal publishing" (2007), produced by the Canadian Association of Learned Journals (CALJ).