2006-2007 Undergraduate Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]
Disability Studies
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Administered by the Dean’s Office, Hofstra College of Liberal Arts
and Sciences
Professor G. Thomas Couser, Department of English and Freshman Composition, Director
Disability is a fundamental facet of human diversity–people with
disabilities make up the largest minority in the U.S. population–and
disabled people have histories and cultures deserving of study on their
own terms. Disability Studies is not primarily the study of disabled
people as a distinct population, however; rather, it involves the
comprehensive investigation of disability as a cultural construct that
undergirds social practices and cultural representations in various
media. Disability Studies, then, approaches disability as a system of
representation (akin to race and gender) that assigns traits to
individuals on the basis of bodily differences.
Disability Studies explores the complex phenomenon of disability from
multiple disciplinary–and interdisciplinary–angles. At the heart of
contemporary Disability Studies, however, is the “social paradigm” of
disability, which locates disability at the intersection between
individuals and their cultural and social environments. (It thus
complements service-oriented approaches to disability.) It helps
prepare students for careers in medicine, social work, public service,
and teaching, in which they may deal with disabled persons; it also
educates students about the way in which disability affects all
citizens as it impinges on issues of broad public concern–such as
abortion, capital punishment, genetics and eugenics, euthanasia, health
care and health insurance, and welfare.
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