Disability as Meta Curriculum
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About The Book

<p>This edited book makes an epistemic claim that disability studies’ approaches to curriculum are doing more than merely critiquing how privileged knowledge excludes disability from curriculum theory and praxis. The scholars in this volume argue instead that Disability Studies embodies an epistemic space that not only demonstrates its difference from the normative curriculum it exceeds curriculum’s confining boundaries. Thus they argue for a “curriculum about curriculum”—one that critically investigates the epistemological ontological and pedagogical claims of the normative curriculum from the critical standpoint of disability.</p><p>Conceptualizing curriculum as cultural politics each chapter offers a theorization of disability via a critical intersectional lens that addresses the following questions: What are the epistemological barriers/possibilities encountered when disability is brought into the intellectual ambit of curriculum theory? What would curriculum theory look like if disabled people re-imagined the curriculum? What is the link between curriculum and conceptions of specialized programming for students identified as disabled? And most critically how do approaches to schooling and conceptions of ability within curriculum studies enact forms of racism sexism and heteronormativity as well as are complicit in the construction and removal of the disabled body from mainstream education? This book was originally published as a special issue of the journal <i>Curriculum Inquiry</i>.</p>
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