Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
Part I. Uncovering
Chapter 1. The Missing Romanian Chapter in Disability History by Radu Harald Dinu
Chapter 2. Deafening Architectural Modernism: Reconsidering the Archive of Adolf Loos by Nina Vollenbröker
Chapter 3. “Brain of Woman, at 30, Half an Idiot”: Recovering Disability Histories from the “Footnotes” of the British Museum Collection by Isabelle Lawrence
Chapter 4. Cripping the Convict Archive by Emily Cock
Chapter 5. The Feverish Saint: A Queer Crip Encounter with the Public Universal Friend by KJ Cerankowski
Part II. Obscuring
Chapter 6. Disability, the Modern State, and the Archive in the United States by Audra Jennings
Chapter 7. There Are No Invalids in the Archive: Hidden Sources and Ideological Obscurations in the History of International Blind Activism by Maria Cristina Galmarini
Chapter 8. Silence and Stigma: How Archival Restrictions Threaten Histories of the Mentally Ill in the United States by Sarah Handley-Cousins
Chapter 9. Recovering the Past to Understand the Present: Cripping School Segregation in New York City by Francine Almash and Jan Valle
Part III. Decolonizing
Chapter 10. Settler Ableism: Indigeneity, Unsettling the Archive, and Accountability in History by Sarah Whitt (Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma), Traci Brynne Voyles, and Susan Burch
Chapter 11. Hall of Miracles: Central American Disability Archives by Heather Vrana
Chapter 12. Cripping the Settler Archive: Disability in Women’s Memoirs of the Indian Service by Jess L. Wilcox Cowing
Part IV. De-Centering
Chapter 13. Deafness and Silences in the Archives by Octavian E. Robinson, Meredith Peruzzi, James McCarthy, William T. Ennis III, Brian H. Greenwald, and Joseph J. Murray
Chapter 14. The Spoken Word Is Not Neutral: Oral History, Disability, and Nonverbal Communication byt Osnat Katz and Samuel Goldstone-Brady
Chapter 15. Ephemeral Madness: The Patient-Theorists of Psychiatric Archives by Liana Kathleen Cole
Chapter 16. Privileged, Oppressed, and Liberated: Unearthing the Archives of a Multigenerational White Deaf Family by Leala Holcomb, Tara Holcomb, and Thomas K. Holcomb
Part V. Accessing
Chapter 17. “It Felt Like Everything”: Disability, Affect, and the Creation of Archival Interdependence by Gracen Mikus Brilmyer
Chapter 18. Transnational Disability Praxis: Archiving Survival, Resistance, and Resilience Amid Ongoing Emergencies by Sona Kazemi, Hemachandran Karah, Efrat Gold, and Mary Jean Hande
Chapter 19. Accessibility Widely Defined: Making the University of Massachusetts Archives’ Disability Collections Available to Everyone by Shuko Tamao and Aaron Rubinstein
Chapter 20. File/Life: Remediating the Pennhurst Archive with Community Archivists by Nicki Pombier
Epilogue
Contributors
Index
Back Cover