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9780252049903 Academic Inspection Copy

Disability Disruptions

Gender, Family, and Care in Post-1989 Poland
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In post-socialist Poland, the state offers no support for its disabled citizens and often abandons families to care for them. Natalia Pamula draws on memoirs, novels, journalistic accounts, protest statements, and interviews to excavate the voices of disabled people and caregivers caught within a system that both privatizes care and denies aid to families. Polish politicians regularly idealize the family. But, as Pamula shows, such rhetoric coerces people into a state of violent intimacy that forces the burden of care onto family members bound by love, dependence, and responsibility. As the narratives show, disability destabilizes national myths, challenges heteronormative and patriarchal family ideals, and exposes continuities between socialist and capitalist regimes in their treatment of disabled citizens. A rich blend of activism and analysis, Disability Disruptions ventures outside Anglophone notions of disability to highlight how Poland's disabled people and caregivers overcome lack of recognition, resist social death, and rewrite public memory.
Natalia Pamula is an assistant professor at the American Studies Center at the University of Warsaw.
Table of contents Introduction 2 Chapter One: Disrupting History 19 Chapter Two: Violent Intimacy 52 Chapter Three: Disability Confessions 85 Chapter Four: Autistic Disavowals 116 Epilogue: The End of Care 146 Bibliography 159
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