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Rosemarie Thomson

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  •  Publications
    36
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    14

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  • All publications (36)
  •  84
    Disability Bioethics: From Theory to Practice
    Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal 27 (2): 323-339. 2017.
    What has come to be called critical disability studies is an emergent field of academic research, teaching, theory building, public scholarship, and something I'll call "educational advocacy." The critical part of critical disability studies suggests its alignment with areas of intellectual inquiry, sometimes awkwardly called identity studies, rooted in the political and social transformations of the mid-20th century brought forward by the broad civil and human rights movement. These movements p…Read more
    What has come to be called critical disability studies is an emergent field of academic research, teaching, theory building, public scholarship, and something I'll call "educational advocacy." The critical part of critical disability studies suggests its alignment with areas of intellectual inquiry, sometimes awkwardly called identity studies, rooted in the political and social transformations of the mid-20th century brought forward by the broad civil and human rights movement. These movements pressed both the law and the social order toward an expansion of rights for people previously marginalized or excluded from full participation in exercising the obligations and benefits of equal citizenship. The ideas of...
    Biomedical Ethics
  •  74
    A Habitable World: Harriet McBryde Johnson's “Case for My Life”
    Hypatia 30 (1): 300-306. 2015.
    Feminist PhilosophyFeminist Approaches to Philosophy
  •  73
    A Cross-Cultural Neuroethics View on the Language of Disability
    American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience 10 (2): 91-92. 2019.
    The AJOB Neuroscience insight article, “A Cross-Cultural Neuroethics View on the Language of Disability,” gathers social science empirical data detailing the words that structure the human variatio...
  •  108
    What Her Body Taught : A Conversation
    with Brenda Jo Brueggemann and Georgina Kleege
    Feminist Studies 31 (1): 13-33. 2005.
  •  104
    Staring: how we look
    Oxford University Press. 2009.
    In the first book of its kind, Garland-Thomson defines staring, explores the factors that motivate it, and considers the targets and the effects of the stare.
    Aspects of Consciousness
  •  75
    Redrawing the Boundaries of Feminist Disability StudiesInvalid Women: Figuring Feminine Illness in American Fiction and Culture, 1840-1940Monstrous ImaginationTattoo, Torture, Mutilation, and Adornment: The Denaturalization of the Body in Culture and TextFeminism and Disability (review)
    with Diane Price Herndl, Marie-Hélène Huet, Frances E. Mascia-Lees, Patricia Sharpe, Barbara Hillyer, and Marie-Helene Huet
    Feminist Studies 20 (3): 582. 1994.
    Feminism: Disability
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