46 pages • 1 hour read
Rebekah TaussigA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Background
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
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Accessibility focuses on the design of buildings, environments, services, and products so people with disabilities have the same access as people without disabilities. This includes accessible housing, parking, wheelchair ramps, closed captioning, and improved website design. Accessibility intersects with inclusion because it is more inclusive of people with disabilities. It is also part of the social model of disability. Rebekah Taussig incorporates accessibility throughout Sitting Pretty: The View From My Ordinary Resilient Disabled Body, especially Chapter 8—emphasizing how inaccessibility creates exclusion and devalues people with disabilities. She also reflects on how inaccessibility factors into her decisions to go places, compared to people without disabilities who may not think about this issue. She broadens discussion of accessibility to everyone, as the world has become more accessible for everyone while helping those with disabilities; this is the case with closed captioning.
Feminism is a movement and ideology that advocates for equality between women and men. It emphasizes how society centers men and advocates for women’s rights. Intersectional feminism integrates perspectives regarding race, sexuality, class, ability, and other identifiers, acknowledging that different women do not necessarily experience the same discrimination. While intersectional feminism aims to include disability, Taussig does not see her identity represented in feminism; this was the case with the panel discussed in Chapter 6. Taussig notes that all women have bodies with limitations and that issues like violence against women, reproductive rights, and equal pay disproportionately impact those with disabilities.
Inclusion comprises practices or policies aimed at including those with disabilities in activities and roles similar to people without disabilities. This requires changing practices or policies to be more inclusive of people with disabilities in education, work, health care, and other areas of society. Taussig emphasizes inclusion in relation to media representation, feminism, and the world in general. For example, she notes Mindy Kaling’s film Late Night excludes characters with disability despite its focus on diversity. Overall, she argues inclusion is about more than people with disabilities and their accommodations: It’s about “more care and flexibility and access for every human body” (193).
Intersectionality refers to the interaction between various parts of a person’s identity in systems of discrimination. These identifiers include race, gender, sexuality, class, immigrant status, religion, age, and ability. They interact to varying degrees, rather than exist separately, in societal oppression and inequality. While Taussig only mentions intersectionality by name once in relation to feminism, she touches on the topic in several sections: Her privilege as a white, cisgender, heterosexual woman protects her from some struggles, but her disability exacerbates others.
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