Social Sciences Division Inaugural EDI lecture

Integrating Disability Across the Community

Watch the replay of this inspiring event, held on 6th June 2024, delving into the heart of disability justice and culture with Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, Professor of English and Bioethics at Emory University.

Professor Garland-Thomson is a renowned US-based author, educator, and thought leader. She shared her pioneering work to develop the field of critical disability studies and to bring disability culture, access, and justice to a broad range of institutions and communities. Her lecture covered a diverse array of topics relevant to disability, ranging from disability and artistic creation to euthanasia and selective foetal testing.

Professor Garland-Thomson's 2016 op-ed about her own experiences ‘Becoming Disabled’, was the inaugural article in a weekly series in the New York Times. She recently co-edited the series into a collection, About Us: Essays from the Disability Series, which captures the voices of a community that has for too long been stereotyped and misrepresented. About Us offers intimate stories of how those with disabilities navigate a world not built for them.

Her work claims a space in which people with disabilities can be seen and heard as they are – not as others perceive them.

She was joined at our event by a discussant, Professor Jonathan Herring of Oxford's Law Faculty, whose work focusses on how the law interacts with “the important things in life: not money, companies or insurance; but love, friendship and intimacy”. His current projects include a co-edited collection on the philosophy of disability law.

Don't miss this transformative conversation that seeks to challenge perceptions and ignite change.

 

This recording is also available on the University's podcast site,

with closed captioning and full transcript at 

Integrating Disability Across the Community | University of Oxford Podcasts

 

https://podcasts.ox.ac.uk/embed/833babf5-da65-4579-a303-fb6a23065057