Fr. 85.20

What it Means to Be Literate - A Disability Materiality Approach to Literacy after Aphasia

English · Hardback

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Description

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"Disability and literacy are often understood as incompatible. Disability is taken to be a sign of illiteracy, and illiteracy to be a sign of disability. These oppositions generate damaging consequences for disabled students (and those labeled as such) who are denied full literacy education and for nonliterate adults who are perceived as lacking intelligence, knowledge, and ability. What It Means to Be Literate turns attention to disabled writers themselves, exposing how the cultural oppositions between disability and literacy affect how people understand themselves as literate and even as fully human. Drawing on interviews with individuals who have experienced strokes and brain injuries causing the language disability aphasia, Elisabeth L. Miller argues for the importance of taking a disability materiality approach to literacy that accounts for the embodied, material experiences of disabled people writing and reading. This approach reveals how aphasic writers' literate practices may reinscribe, challenge, or even exceed scripts around the body in literacy (how brains, hands, eyes, mouths, voice boxes, and more operate to make reading and writing happen) as well as what and how spaces, activities, tools, and materials matter in literate practice. Miller pushes for a deeper understanding of how individuals' specific bodies always matter for literate practice and identity, enabling researchers to better account for, and counter, ableist literate norms"--

About the author










Elisabeth L. Miller is assistant professor of English and director of the Writing and Speaking in the Disciplines Program at University of Nevada, Reno. She researches and teaches about literacy, disability, and writing across the curriculum.

Summary

This approach reveals how aphasic writers’ literate practices may reinscribe, challenge, or even exceed scripts around the body in literacy (how brains, hands, eyes, mouths, voice boxes, and more operate to make reading and writing happen) as well as what and how spaces, activities, tools, and materials matter in literate practice.

Product details

Authors Elisabeth Miller, Elisabeth L Miller
Publisher University Of Pittsburgh Press
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.12.2022
 
EAN 9780822947233
ISBN 978-0-8229-4723-3
No. of pages 188
Dimensions 157 mm x 157 mm x 8 mm
Weight 431 g
Series Composition, Literacy, and Cul
Composition, Literacy, and Culture
Subject Humanities, art, music > Linguistics and literary studies > General and comparative linguistics

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