Fw: H-Disability: New Book Series: Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine [Announcement]

NH
Nancy Hansen
Sun, May 19, 2024 4:53 PM

Nancy E Hansen, PhD,

Professor, Director,

Interdisciplinary Master's Program,Disability Studies

Accessibility is not an optics issue or a choice it is a necessity

If you say I have special needs ... then just say the word disabled. Euphemisms only fuel ableism. Disability is not a dirty word.  Haben Girma
Disability is creativity at a moment’s notice. It adds depth and texture. It’s another element in the human experience
128 Education Building

University of Manitoba, Winnipeg,

Manitoba, Canada, R3T 2N2

Email:Nancy.Hansen@umanitoba.camailto:Nancy.Hansen@umanitoba.ca

Chapter 18: DisAppearing Disability: Disability MAiD Invisible, by Nancy Hansen

https://canadianscholars.ca/book/disappearing/


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Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2024 8:15 PM
To: Nancy Hansen Nancy.Hansen@UMANITOBA.CA
Subject: H-Disability: New Book Series: Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine [Announcement]

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Greetings Nancy Hansen,
A new Announcement has been posted in H-Disability.

New Book Series: Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicinehttps://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20034365/new-book-series-disability-history-science-technology-and-medicine
Submitted by Jaipreet Virdihttps://networks.h-net.org/users/jaipreet-virdi on 05/19/2024 - 1:14am
Announcement Type
Call for Publications

Johns Hopkins University Presshttps://www.press.jhu.edu/ now has a new book series, "Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine" with Jaipreet Virdihttps://www.history.udel.edu/people/faculty/jvirdi, Mara Millshttps://steinhardt.nyu.edu/people/mara-mills and Wayne Tanhttps://hope.edu/directory/people/tan-wayne/index.html as Series Editors.

About the Series

Disability has always been part-and-parcel of human experience. Within the past twenty years, disability history has rapidly emerged as a subdiscipline with an analytical framework for examining the lived experiences of disabled people, across time and place, alongside the structural barriers that construct how disability is experienced and understood.

Medical historians have examined how disability is historically contingent to scientific and clinical ideas about the body and health, while rethinking disease histories in the context of disability. Historians of technology have unraveled the roles disabled people play as creators, users, and redesigners of consumer products and scientific apparatuses. Historians of science have explored disability expertise, disability epistemologies, and the distinct ways research settings forge entangled histories of disability, labor, and knowledge in the laboratory, industry, and beyond.

Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicinehttps://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-science-technology-and-medicine/ (D+HSTM) is a new book series for scholars bringing disability theory into conversation with HSTM. This includes intersections with applied forms of the social sciences—demography, economics, anthropology, archeology, linguistics, music—as well as standard branches of medical science—pharmaceutics, insurance, surgery, physiology, healthcare.

We are interested in works that look at science as practiced within institutions that house or employ disabled people, the technologies and political systems used to categorize and classify disabled bodies, as well as stories of disabled professionals and lay experts working as experimenters or producers of scientific knowledge. We especially encourage proposals on non-Western and Global South histories of disability in HSTM.    While books in this series will engage with historical methods, we encourage scholarship that overlaps with innovative and intersectional methodologies, such as “design justice” or “crip technoscience,” and we welcome work in the subfield of disability and Science and Technology Studies (STS).

Submission Guidelines

Books in the D+HSTM series will primarily be single-authored books, but co-authored books or edited volumes with contributed chapters that present new interventions and methodologies are also welcome.

To foster an environment of support, the editors will work closely with author(s) through the book proposal and manuscript process. We especially aim to mentor first-time authors by providing extensive editorial feedback, suggestions for resources, and opportunities to workshop manuscript drafts.

With a commitment to disability justice, books in this series will incorporate aspects of accessible publishing (e.g. alt text for e-books) and will be promoted widely both inside and outside of academic circles. Where possible, the editors will strive to work with authors to make their books Open Access.  Have a book idea in mind? A manuscript that is a perfect fit? Or questions?

Get in touch: disabilityhstm@gmail.commailto:disabilityhstm@gmail.com

Contact Email
disabilityhstm@gmail.com
URL
https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-science-technology-and-medicine/

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Nancy E Hansen, PhD, Professor, Director, Interdisciplinary Master's Program,Disability Studies Accessibility is not an optics issue or a choice it is a necessity If you say I have special needs ... then just say the word disabled. Euphemisms only fuel ableism. Disability is not a dirty word. Haben Girma Disability is creativity at a moment’s notice. It adds depth and texture. It’s another element in the human experience 128 Education Building University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, R3T 2N2 Email:Nancy.Hansen@umanitoba.ca<mailto:Nancy.Hansen@umanitoba.ca> Chapter 18: DisAppearing Disability: Disability MAiD Invisible, by Nancy Hansen https://canadianscholars.ca/book/disappearing/ ________________________________ From: H-Net <drupaladmin@mail.h-net.org> on behalf of H-Net Notifications <drupaladmin@mail.h-net.org> Sent: Saturday, May 18, 2024 8:15 PM To: Nancy Hansen <Nancy.Hansen@UMANITOBA.CA> Subject: H-Disability: New Book Series: Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine [Announcement] Caution! This message was sent from outside the University of Manitoba. Greetings Nancy Hansen, A new Announcement has been posted in H-Disability. New Book Series: Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine<https://networks.h-net.org/group/announcements/20034365/new-book-series-disability-history-science-technology-and-medicine> Submitted by Jaipreet Virdi<https://networks.h-net.org/users/jaipreet-virdi> on 05/19/2024 - 1:14am Announcement Type Call for Publications Johns Hopkins University Press<https://www.press.jhu.edu/> now has a new book series, "Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine" with Jaipreet Virdi<https://www.history.udel.edu/people/faculty/jvirdi>, Mara Mills<https://steinhardt.nyu.edu/people/mara-mills> and Wayne Tan<https://hope.edu/directory/people/tan-wayne/index.html> as Series Editors. About the Series Disability has always been part-and-parcel of human experience. Within the past twenty years, disability history has rapidly emerged as a subdiscipline with an analytical framework for examining the lived experiences of disabled people, across time and place, alongside the structural barriers that construct how disability is experienced and understood. Medical historians have examined how disability is historically contingent to scientific and clinical ideas about the body and health, while rethinking disease histories in the context of disability. Historians of technology have unraveled the roles disabled people play as creators, users, and redesigners of consumer products and scientific apparatuses. Historians of science have explored disability expertise, disability epistemologies, and the distinct ways research settings forge entangled histories of disability, labor, and knowledge in the laboratory, industry, and beyond. Disability in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine<https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-science-technology-and-medicine/> (D+HSTM) is a new book series for scholars bringing disability theory into conversation with HSTM. This includes intersections with applied forms of the social sciences—demography, economics, anthropology, archeology, linguistics, music—as well as standard branches of medical science—pharmaceutics, insurance, surgery, physiology, healthcare. We are interested in works that look at science as practiced within institutions that house or employ disabled people, the technologies and political systems used to categorize and classify disabled bodies, as well as stories of disabled professionals and lay experts working as experimenters or producers of scientific knowledge. We especially encourage proposals on non-Western and Global South histories of disability in HSTM. While books in this series will engage with historical methods, we encourage scholarship that overlaps with innovative and intersectional methodologies, such as “design justice” or “crip technoscience,” and we welcome work in the subfield of disability and Science and Technology Studies (STS). Submission Guidelines Books in the D+HSTM series will primarily be single-authored books, but co-authored books or edited volumes with contributed chapters that present new interventions and methodologies are also welcome. To foster an environment of support, the editors will work closely with author(s) through the book proposal and manuscript process. We especially aim to mentor first-time authors by providing extensive editorial feedback, suggestions for resources, and opportunities to workshop manuscript drafts. With a commitment to disability justice, books in this series will incorporate aspects of accessible publishing (e.g. alt text for e-books) and will be promoted widely both inside and outside of academic circles. Where possible, the editors will strive to work with authors to make their books Open Access. Have a book idea in mind? A manuscript that is a perfect fit? Or questions? Get in touch: disabilityhstm@gmail.com<mailto:disabilityhstm@gmail.com> Contact Email disabilityhstm@gmail.com URL https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-…<https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/jhu-book-series-disability-in-the-history-of-science-technology-and-medicine/> Message from a proud sponsor of H-Net: [New Books Network] The New Books Network<https://networks.h-net.org/nbn-campaign?mtm_campaign=nbn-ss> is proud to be a sponsor of H-Net. If you are interested in becoming an NBN host, please go here<https://networks.h-net.org/node/513/pages/10038031/new-book-network-proudly-supports-h-net>. Si te interesa hacer entrevistas en español, contáctanos<https://networks.h-net.org/nbn-es-campaign?mtm_campaign=nbn-ss-es>. [H-Net] Please help us keep H-Net free and accessible. $25 from each of our subscribers would fund H-Net for two years. Click here<https://networks.h-net.org/support-h-net> to make a tax-deductible donation online. Contact the Help Desk: help@mail.h-net.org<mailto:help@mail.h-net.org>. Manage notification settings by visiting My Profile > Notifications on the Commons<https://networks.h-net.org/>. [H-Net on Twitter] <https://twitter.com/HNet_Humanities> [H-Net on Facebook] <https://www.facebook.com/humanities.socialsciences.online> [https://analytics.h-net.org/matomo.php?idsite=1&rec=1&action_name=email_notification]