Thinking with disability in a Post-Trump era

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Event details

Wednesday 25 November 2020
4:30pm
Online event

Description

Join us for an online seminar with Professor Dan Goodley, to discuss the remnants of Trumpism that still exist in the world and specifically, how these ideas relate to the rather general question of who’s allowed to be human?

Professor Goodley will ponder the meaning of the human category and consider who is invited to have access to this category. He seeks to explore the ways in which normal, everyday and typical understandings of the human being are, in reality, incredibly exclusionary: including some and omitting others. And this potential for the human category to divide and rule – to let in some and force out others – is a category that is currently, worryingly and deplorably being rewritten in popular discourse. The consequences are potentially wide-reaching and terrifying. And so, our responses have to be immediate and inclusive. Here disability activism and theory can help us in our responses.

Dan Goodley is Professor of Disability Studies and Education in the School of Education and co-director of iHuman: the research institute for the study of the human. Dan is interested in theorising and challenging the conditions of disablism (the social, political, cultural and psycho-emotional exclusion of people with physical, sensory and/or cognitive impairments) and ableism (the contemporary ideals on which the able, autonomous, productive citizen is based). Recent work includes Disability Studies (2016, Sage, 2nd edition) and Dis/ability Studies (2014, Routledge)

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iHuman

How we understand being ‘human’ differs between disciplines and has changed radically over time. We are living in an age marked by rapid growth in knowledge about the human body and brain, and new technologies with the potential to change them.

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