Composing Disability 2018: Crip Politics and the Crisis of Culture Program of Events
The George Washington University
Thursday, March 22nd-Friday, March 23rd
Thursday, March 22nd
Session 1: 10:45am-12:00pmPanel: Performance and Theater--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “‘Today for you, tomorrow for me’: Queer Contagion and Crip Chronicity in the AIDS Musical,” Sam Yates, George Washington University
- “Adaptive Activism in a Time of Crisis: How Disability Refigures the Cultural Landscape,” Ann M. Fox, Davidson University
Session 2: 1:00pm-2:30pm
Panel: Madness and Post-Truth--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Citizenship, Madness, and the Age of . . . ,” James Berger, Yale University
- “Cripping the Position of the Mad Subject in the Post-Truth Era,” Meghann O’Leary, University of Illinois at Chicago
- “Crip Technoscience Manifesto,” Aimi Hamraie and Kelly Fritsch, Vanderbilt University and University of Toronto
Panel: Disability and Literature--Marvin Center 309
- “No Pity: Mary Wilkins Freeman, Subsistence, and ‘The Tears of Things,’” Clare Mullaney, University of Pennsylvania
- “‘He Will Be What You Make of Him’: Aesthetic Inclusionism and Social Death in Stephen Crane’s ‘The Monster,’” Joshua Kupetz, University of Michigan
- “Diagnosis, Eugenics, and Creative Kinship,” Theodora Danylevich, George Washington University
Keynote: 2:45pm-4:15pm
Liz Crow--Jack Morton Auditorium
Liz Crow is an artist-activist working with performance, film, audio and text. Interested in drama, life stories and experimental work, she is drawn to the potential of storytelling to trigger change. Described as “a director of real visual flair”, her work has been praised for its ability “to get under the skin of a subject.” Liz’s work has shown at Tate Modern and the Smithsonian Institution, as well as on television and at festivals internationally. Through a four-year NESTA (National Endowment for Science,Technology and the Arts) fellowship, she explored ways to combine her creative practice and political activism. Liz is a graduate of the Skillset Guiding Lights scheme where she was mentored by Peter Cattaneo (The Full Monty), an Associate of the Centre for Cultural Disability Studies at Liverpool Hope University, and is currently a doctoral candidate on a practice-led PhD at the University of England.
Session 3: 4:30pm-6:00pm
Panel: Narrating a Life 1--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Unseen Voices: Disability Life Writing and Archival Martyrdom,” Jonathan Hsy, George Washington University
- “Disabled South Asian Masculinity in My Name is Khan,” Sukshma Vedere, George Washington University
- “Impairment Materiality and the aesthetics of Crip Social Realism: Lukacs, Jameson, Haraway and Crow in conversation with New Materialist and Modern Expressionist Super-Crip Futurisms,” Zahari Richter, George Washington University
Panel: Disability and Performance--Gelman 301
- “Me Before You-thanasia: The Erasure of Disability Through Able-Bodied Love,” Olivia Eggars, George Washington University
- “Side Shows: Fascination in Difference,” Grace Mitchell, George Washington University
- “‘Getting it Right': Balancing Narrative Freedom and Positive Representation in Disability/Illness Narratives,” Julia Weiss, George Washington University
Friday, March 23rd
Session 4: 9:00am-10:30amPanel: Contemporary Crisis and Sanctuary--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Debt Crisis: Student Debt and the Temporalities of Disability at Gallaudet University,” Jaime Madden, Minnesota State University
- “The Measure is the Man: Cultural Category Crisis, the Failure of Postmodernism, and Dismodern Re/measurement,” Shaun Ford, Purdue University
- “Livable Cities, Habitable Worlds,” Aimi Hamraie, Vanderbilt University
Panel: Disability at the Intersection--Marvin Center 301
- “Ablenationalism in Life and Death: Racialized Affectivity and Interspecies Entanglements Contemporary Crisis and Sanctuary,” Anastasia Todd, Arizona State University
- “From U.S Disability Rights Historiography to Crip Pasts: On Truth’s Excess” Lezlie Frye, University of Massachusetts, Amherst
- “Investigating Labor Practices Through Representational Detective Work” MarChé Daughtry, Williams College
Session 5: 10:45-12:00pm
Panel: War, Empire, Conflict--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Cripping Victoria: Constructing Alternative Nineteenth-Century Histories of Disability,” Joyce L. Huff, Ball State University
- “War and the Disablement of Bodies,” Sona Kazemi Hill, University of Toronto
- “Cripping the Normativity of Work,” Ling Liu, George Washington University
Panel: Stigma, Legitimation, and Resilience: Campus and Community Ethnographies (George Washington University, University Writing Program)--Marvin Center 301
- “Skipping Class: Young Women, Disabilities, and Education,” Eleanor Bock, Sarah Cassway, and Quinn Casey, George Washington University
- “More Than Senioritis,” Riley Doyle, Mo Mobley, and Shira Strongin, George Washington University
- “Middle-Aged Black Women's Experiences of Physical Disabilities: Culture and Attitudes Toward Disablement,” Lorrin Davis and Rolaine Thompson, George Washington University
Session 6: 1:00pm-2:30pm
Panel: Politics and Reproduction-Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Embedded Truths and Transparency in Mexican Sexual Disability Politics,” Susan Antebi, University of Toronto
- “Cripping Birth: Resisting Eugenic Nationalist Rhetoric within the Contemporary Midwifery Movement,” Ally Day, University of Toledo
- “Disability, Risk, and the Politics of Spectral Medicine,” Kelly Fritsch and Anne McGuire, University of Toronto and University of Toronto
Panel: Necropolitics and Globalization--Marvin Center 405
- “Concealment and Contamination: The Slow Death of the Hibakusha in the Aftermath of the Atomic Bombings,” Soo-jin Kweon, George Washington University
- “Violence Against the Korean American Community in Media Depictions of Black/Korean Relations surrounding the 1992 Los Angeles Riots,” Chung, Nancy. George Washington University
- “Under Construction, or Under Water? Resurfacing the Jericho Road: On Systemic Violence and the Surfacing of Necropolitics,” Shawn Meddock, George Washington University
Session 7: 2:45pm-4:15pm
Panel: Genre--Jack Morton Auditorium
- “Recovering Puritans: Reading The Witch as Mad Feminist Camp,” Cynthia Barounis, Washington University in St. Louis
- “Of Metaphor and Metonymy: Articulating Disability in the Graphic Body Memoir,” Renata Lucena Dalmaso, Universidade Federal do Sul e Sudeste do Pará (Unifesspa)
- “Feeling Crip: Mania, Queerness, and Party Drugs,” Brady James Forrest, George Washington University
Panel: Narrating a Life 2--Marvin Center 405
- “Queer Forms: Establishing a Politics of Empathy in Christina Crosby’s A Body, Undone: Living on After Great Pain,” Michael Doss, University of Delaware
- “Towards a Political-Personhood: Contested Truths in Lauren Slater’s Lying: A Metaphorical Memoir,” Megan O’Donnell, University of Delaware
- “Disembodied Voices in British Biopics: The King's Speech and The Theory of Everything at the Cross-Roads of Fiction and Body Politics,” Alexa Joubin, George Washington University
Closing Plenary: 4:30pm-6:00pm
Jack Morton Auditorium
Robert McRuer, Jonathan Hsy, David Mitchell, and Abby Wilkerson