[Linganth] List of linguistic anthropological readings on disability

Janina Fenigsen jfenigsen at gmail.com
Mon Feb 10 03:56:41 UTC 2020


Thank you, colleagues, for responding. I paste the list below. My thanks
also go to Aliyah Balsiger, my GA, for compiling this list:

Al Zidjaly, N. (2015). *Disability, Discourse and Technology. Agency and
Inclusion in (Inter)action*. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave
Macmillan.

Bloch, S., Saldert, C., & Ferm, U. (2015). Problematic topic transitions in
dysarthric conversation. *International Journal of Speech-Language
Pathology, 17*(4), 373-383.

Bloch, S., & Wilkinson, R. (2004). The understandability of AAC: a
conversation analysis study of acquired dysarthria. *AAC: Augmentative &
Alternative Communication, 20*(4), 272-282.

Bloch, S., & Wilkinson, R. (2011). Acquired dysarthria in conversation:
Methods of resolving understandability problems. *International Journal of
Language & Communication Disorders, 46*(5), 510-523.

Bloch, S., & Wilkinson, R. (2011). *The accomplishment of nonserious talk
in severe speech disability: An examination of recipient uptake and delayed
other-initiated repair*.

Bloom, Molly. 2019. Liminal Spaces, Titanium Braces: Narrative Tropes of
Competence among Wheelchair Basketball Players. *The Journal of Linguistic
Anthropology* 29(1): 119-137.

Capps, Lisa and Elinor Ochs. 1996. *Constructing Panic: The Discourse of
Agoraphobia.* Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Dumas, Nathaniel. 2012. More than Hello: Reconstituting Sociolinguistic
Subjectivities in Introductions among American Stuttering English
Speakers. *Language
and Communication*, 32: 216–228.

Engelke, Christopher, and D. Jeffrey Higginbotham (2013). “Looking to
Speak: On the Temporality of Misalignment in Interaction Involving an
Augmented Communicator Using Eye-Gaze Technology.” Journal of Interactional
Research in Communication Disorders 4(1).

Friedner, Michele and Pamela Block. 2017. Deaf Studies Meets Autistic
Studies. *The Senses and Society* 12:3:282-300.

Goodwin, C. (Ed.). (2003). *Conversation and Brain Damage*. Oxford: Oxford
University Press.

Jarman, Michelle, Leila Monaghan, and Alison Quaggin Harkin, eds. *Barriers
and Belonging: Personal Narratives of Disability*. Temple University Press,
2017.

Kulick, Don. 2015. Loneliness and its Opposite. Duke University Press.

Nakamura, Karen. *Deaf in Japan*: *Signing and the Politics of Identity*.
NY : Cornell University Press , 2006 .

*Nakamura*, *Karen*.  A *Disability of the Soul: An Ethnography of
Schizophrenia and Mental Illness in Contemporary Japan*. Ithaca, NY:
Cornell University Press. 2013.

Ochs, Elinor, and Olga Solomon. 2010. Autistic sociality. *Ethos*, 38.1:
69-92.

 Reno, Joshua (2012). Technically speaking: On equipping and evaluating
“unnatural” language learners. *American Anthropologist* 114(3): 406-419.

Robillard, Albert. 1996. Anger In-the-Social-Order. Body and Society
2(1):17-30.













 *Barriers and belonging*: *personal narratives of disability*, edited by
Michelle Jarman, Leila Monaghan, and Alison Quaggin Harkin, Philadelphia,
PA, Temple University Press, 2017,
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