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Disability Works

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Winner, 2025 Midwest Modern Language Association Book AwardWinner, 2025 South Atlantic Modern Language Association Book AwardFinalist, 2025 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre ...
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  • 16 July 2024
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Winner, 2025 Midwest Modern Language Association Book Award
Winner, 2025 South Atlantic Modern Language Association Book Award
Finalist, 2025 Barnard Hewitt Award for Outstanding Research in Theatre History, given by American Society for Theatre Research

Winner, 2025 Lilla A. Heston Award for Outstanding Scholarship in Interpretation and Performance Studies, given by the National Communication Association
Winner, Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Communication Studies Division Book of the Year, given by the National Communication Association
Winner, 2025 C.L.R. James Award, awarded by the Working-Class Studies Association
Special Mention, 2025 David Bradby Monograph Prize, given by the Theatre and Performance Research Association
Shortlisted, 2025 Outstanding Book Award, given by the Association for Theatre in Higher Education
Finalist, 2025 PROSE Awards: Music and the Performing Arts

Finalist, 2025 John W. Frick Book Award, given by the American Theatre and Drama Society

A cultural history of disability, performance, and work in the modern United States

In 1967, the US government funded the National Theatre of the Deaf, a groundbreaking rehabilitation initiative employing deaf actors. This project aligned with the postwar belief that transforming bodies, minds, aesthetics, and institutions could liberate disabled Americans from economic reliance on the state, and demonstrated the growing optimism that performance could provide job opportunities for people with disabilities.

Disability Works offers an original cultural history of disability and performance in modern America, exploring rehabilitation’s competing legacies. The book highlights an unexpected alliance of rehabilitation professionals, deaf teachers, policy makers, disability activists, queer artists, and religious leaders who championed performance’s rehabilitative potential. At the same time, some disabled artists imagined a different political itinerary for theatrical practice. Rather than acquiescing to the terms of productive citizenship, these artists recuperated rehabilitation as a creative resource for imagining and building a world beyond work. Using previously unexplored archives, Disability Works portrays the history of disabled Americans’ performance labor as both a national aspiration and a national problem. The book reveals how disabled artists and activists ingeniously used rehabilitative resources to fuel their performance practices, breaking free from the grasp of rehabilitation and fostering more just institutions.

From state-funded “sign-mime” to Black modern dance, community theatre to Stanislavskian actor training, speculative activism to epistolary performance, Disability Works recovers an expansive repertoire of aesthetic and infrastructural investigations into the terms of how disability works in modern American culture.

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Price: $89.00
Pages: 344
Publisher: NYU Press
Imprint: NYU Press
Series: Performance and American Cultures
Publication Date: 16 July 2024
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781479824861
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: LITERARY CRITICISM / General, ART / Performance, SOCIAL SCIENCE / General
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"Disability Works puts before us histories that will quickly become indispensable for scholars and general readers, narrating how vibrant queercrip imaginaries have long looked beyond rehabilitation and indeed beyond work, imagining and performing ways of being-in-common that speak back to compulsory able-bodiedness. The histories that McKelvey documents provide us alternative, critically queer, and generatively disabled maps for moving forward. The demands of productive citizenship have rarely been felt as strongly as they are at this moment. In this context, the crip imagination that the book documents is a refreshing reminder that another world is possible."
Patrick McKelvey is Assistant Professor in the Department of Theatre Arts at University of Pittsburgh