Pulling together an impressive group of both well-seasoned and new and promising South Asian scholars on disability, this book raises thought-provoking questions regarding the way in which the universalizing discourses of disability formulated in the Global North seem inadequate in engaging the vast diversity of discourses of disability that emerge in global and local policies as well as the every day experiences of disabled people in India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Drawing on wide-range of analytical practices borrowed from different disciplines ranging from policy analyses, qualitative research methodologies, genealogical inquiry, literary analyses, media studies, and even Amartya Sen's capabilities approach, every one of the chapters complicates notions of the social and medical model of disability, the politics of care, ideologies and practices of inclusion, and rights-based approaches to social justice for disabled people and their imagined futures in careful, thorough, and insightful ways. Locating their analyses in a historical socio-political framework, each of these chapters also engages how colonialism, neocolonialism, development studies, as well as local cultural practices/ ideologies rewrite the terrain of a critical disability studies located unabashedly in the Global South. (Nirmala Erevelles, PhD, The University of Alabama)
Shridevi Rao and Maya Kalyanpur contribute a timely and critical text to the burgeoning field of disability and development as well as the literature focused specifically on disability in South Asia. The edited text explores a range of themes from gender to education, language and embodiment and film with sensitities to local nuances and contexts, interpretations of disability and culture while serving the purpose of promoting epistemologies of the South. A welcome critical and interdisicplinary text adding to those looking to question, theorize and politicize. (Dr Shaun Grech, Manchester Metropolitan University)
Pulling together an impressive group of both well-seasoned and new and promising South Asian scholars on disability, this book raises thought-provoking questions regarding the way in which the universalizing discourses of disability formulated in the Global North seem inadequate in engaging the vast diversity of discourses of disability that emerge in global and local policies as well as the every day experiences of disabled people in India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. Drawing on wide-range of analytical practices borrowed from different disciplines ranging from policy analyses, qualitative research methodologies, genealogical inquiry, literary analyses, media studies, and even Amartya Sen's capabilities approach, every one of the chapters complicates notions of the social and medical model of disability, the politics of care, ideologies and practices of inclusion, and rights-based approaches to social justice for disabled people and their imagined futures in careful, thorough, and insightful ways. Locating their analyses in a historical socio-political framework, each of these chapters also engages how colonialism, neocolonialism, development studies, as well as local cultural practices/ ideologies rewrite the terrain of a critical disability studies located unabashedly in the Global South. (Nirmala Erevelles, PhD, The University of Alabama)
Shridevi Rao and Maya Kalyanpur contribute a timely and critical text to the burgeoning field of disability and development as well as the literature focused specifically on disability in South Asia. The edited text explores a range of themes from gender to education, language and embodiment and film with sensitities to local nuances and contexts, interpretations of disability and culture while serving the purpose of promoting epistemologies of the South. A welcome critical and interdisicplinary text adding to those looking to question, theorize and politicize. (Dr Shaun Grech, Manchester Metropolitan University)