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Disability and the Victorians

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Disability and the Victorians investigates the attitudes of Victorians towards people with impairments, illustrates how these influenced the interventions they introduced to support such people and...
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  • 19 March 2020
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Disability and the Victorians brings together in one collection a range of topics, perspectives and experiences from the Victorian era that present a unique overview of the development and impact of attitudes and interventions towards those with impairments during this time. The collection also considers how the legacies of these actions can be seen to have continued throughout the twentieth century right up to the present day. Subjects addressed include deafness, blindness, language delay, substance dependency, imperialism and the representation of disabled characters in popular fiction. These varied topics illustrate how common themes can be found in how Victorian philanthropists and administrators responded to those under their care. Often character, morality and the chance to be restored to productivity and usefulness overrode medical need and this both influenced and reflected wider societal views of impairment and inability.
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Price: £85.00
Pages: 216
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Disability History
Publication Date: 19 March 2020
ISBN: 9781526145710
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / Victorian Era (1837-1901), Social and cultural history, MEDICAL / History, SOCIAL SCIENCE / People with Disabilities, History of medicine

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'Disability and the Victorians: Attitudes, Interventions, Legacies is a very timely work. In the midst of a global pandemic that has left many people newly impaired, there is an increased need for scholarship that provides frameworks for coming to terms with disability as a sociocultural phenomenon and a lived identity. [...] Disability and the Victorians makes an important contribution to the history of medicine and attitudes toward disability in Victorian Britain and beyond and provides a useful resource for scholars of nineteenth-century Britain.'
Joyce L. Huff, Journal of British Studies

'Disability and the Victorians encourages the reader to perceive these [Victorian] attitudes not as an event but as a chapter in a story that continues to this day. This collection challenges us to critically examine the systems and structures that perpetuate marginalization[...]Even though it encompasses tough subjects, Disability and the Victorians offers an academic study that eschews jargon; it guides the reader through the research in the field as if it were narrated through experience rather than academic findings.
Alberto Ruiz, SEL's Marginalia

Disability and the Victorians certainly fulfils its editors’ desire to generate debate and spur further research: its contents encourage critical reflection on disabled people’s experiences in the present day, thus enabling us to see how monumentally important the task of exploring the history of disability is.
Caitlin Doley (University of York), British Association for Victorian Studies

Foreword – Karen Sayer
Introduction – Iain Hutchison, Martin Atherton and Jaipreet Virdi

Part I: Attitudes
1 Restoration to usefulness: Victorian middle-class attitudes towards the healthcare of the working poor – Amy W Farnbach Pearson
2 Imperial lives – confronting the legacies of empire, disability and the Victorians – Esme Cleall
3 Disabling the author in Mid-Victorian realist fiction: case studies of George Eliot and Harriet Martineau – Deborah M Fratz

Part II: Interventions
4 Medicalising deafness in Victorian London: the Royal Ear Hospital, 1816-1916 – Jaipreet Virdi
5 Drunkenness, degeneration, and disability in England – Joanne Woiak
6 Victorian medical awareness of childhood language disabilities – Paula Hellal and Marjorie Lorch
7 ‘Happiness and usefulness increased”: Consuming ability in the antebellum artificial limb market – Caroline Lieffers

Part III: Legacies
8 The disabled child in an industrial metropolis: Glasgow’s children’s hospital, Scottish convalescent homes ‘in the country’, and east park home for infirm children – Iain Hutchison
9 The panopticon: Towards an intimate history of special schools for the blind – Fred Reid
10 Allowed to be idle: Perpetuating Victorian attitudes to deafness and employability in United Kingdom social policy – Martin Atherton
Index