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Featured researches published by Rebecca Mallett.


Archive | 2014

Approaching Disability : Critical issues and perspectives

Rebecca Mallett; Katherine Runswick-Cole

1. Approaching disability: foundational perspectives 2. Approaching disability: global perspectives 3. Critical perspectives on disability and childhood 4. Critical perspectives on disability and culture 5. Critical perspectives on disability and history 6. Critical perspectives on disability and identity politics 7. Critical issues: researching disabled children in the social world 8. Critical issues: Theorising Bodies in the Social World 9. Conclusion: Final Thoughts and Future Directions


Archive | 2012

Commodifying Autism: The Cultural Contexts of ‘Disability’ in the Academy

Rebecca Mallett; Katherine Runswick-Cole

The cultural presence of autism has grown vastly over the past few decades, with the impairment becoming the subject of films (e.g. Rain Man, 1998; Snow Cake, 2006), novels (e.g. Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, 2003), autobiographies (e.g. Grandin, 1996; Lawson, 2000), museum exhibitions (e.g. Welcome to Our World … Living with Autism, 2011) and newspaper articles (e.g. McNeil, 2009; Alleyne, 2010). In turn, these have attracted the attention of academics in the humanities and social sciences (for instance, Greenwell, 2004; Murray, 2008; Davidson and Smith, 2009). Such considerations acknowledge, as Murray (2008: xvii) does, that autism can be considered ‘compellingly attractive in the way it presents human otherness’. However, although autism as a mysterious and fascinating style of human difference has been explored for what it reveals of popular understandings, the fascination signaled by its emergence and proliferation as an academic presence has not been scrutinised. In this chapter we are interested in approaching autism critically. We seek to understand the cultural contexts of this academic presence and think through its implications. By positioning academia as part of contemporary consumer culture, we borrow from Marxist-inspired theories to conceptualise the processes by which ‘seemingly the most enigmatic of conditions’ (Murray, 2008: xvi) has become produced, traded and consumed within the social sciences.


Disability & Society | 2011

Representing disability in an ableist world: essays on mass media

Rebecca Mallett


The Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal | 2014

Claiming Comedic Immunity Or, What Do You Get When You Cross Contemporary British Comedy with Disability

Rebecca Mallett


Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs | 2009

Choosing ‘stereotypes’: debating the efficacy of (British) disability-criticism

Rebecca Mallett


Journal of Literary and Cultural Disability Studies | 2013

Introduction: Disability, Humour and Comedy

Tom Coogan; Rebecca Mallett


Archive | 2010

Images of criminality, victimisation and disability

Rebecca Mallett; Manuel Madriaga


Disability & Society | 2007

Guide for accessible research dissemination: presenting research for everyone

Rebecca Mallett; Katherine Runswick-Cole; Tabitha Collingbourne


Archive | 2016

Theorising Normalcy and the Mundane : Precarious Positions

Rebecca Mallett; Cassie Ogden; Jenny Slater


Archive | 2013

Disability, Humour and Comedy

Tom Coogan; Rebecca Mallett

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Katherine Runswick-Cole

Manchester Metropolitan University

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Manuel Madriaga

Sheffield Hallam University

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Tom Coogan

University of Leicester

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Jenny Slater

Sheffield Hallam University

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