Full Description
Disabled sexuality has too often been cast as taboo, as disabled people are routinely de-sexualized, infantilized, or positioned as objects of pity and (over)protection. Nevertheless, despite facing numerous obstacles to sexuality, sexual expression, and parenting, individuals with disabilities have consistently showcased resilience, agency, and creativity.
Disabilities, Pleasures, and Sexualities: Transforming Perceptions, Cultivating Desires, volume 17 of the Research in Social Science and Disability series, seeks to highlight and celebrate these qualities with contributions that challenge stereotypes, reimagine expressions of sexuality, illuminate aspects of reproduction and parenting, and explore different forms of intimate relationships. They recognize, affirm, and celebrate the reality that many disabled people already live full and fulfilling erotic lives. With contributions that foreground the lived experiences, representations, and self-understandings of disabled people as sexual beings, some contributions explore how disabled individuals and communities resist the social, cultural, and political forces that render their sexualities deviant, invisible, or dangerous. Other contributions turn to the urgent task of transforming sex education, critically examining how sex education for disabled people can be radically transformed. Finally, there are a number of pieces that highlight how disabled people navigate the affective, embodied, and increasingly digital landscapes of intimacy and connection.
In sum, this volume imagines sexuality as a site of access, interdependence, creativity, and joy, in hopes that it reshapes the broader sexual cultures in which we all participate.
Contents
Introduction: Disabilities, Pleasures, and Sexualities: Transforming Perceptions, Cultivating Desires; Alan Santinele Martino, B. Ethan Coston, and Ann Fudge Schormans
Chapter 1. Sexuality and Intellectual Disability in American Film, 1939-2022; Allison C. Carey and Katie Spengler
Chapter 2. "Someone that Loses their Temper is in my Opinion, Less of a Man": Rethinking Masculinity through the Perspectives of Men Living with Intellectual Disabilities; Nicole Diakite, Danny Pryke, Ann Fudge Schormans, and Robert Wilton
Chapter 3. Dis/Enabled Queerness: Cripping "Coming Out" and Resisting Heteronormative Ableism in Taiwan; Shanshan Ouyang and Po-Han Lee
Chapter 4. "We don't all Die, you have to Teach some of us How to be Adults": Disabled LGBT+ Young People's Experiences of and Recommendations for Relationships and Sex Education; Helen Dring-Turner
Chapter 5. Envisioning Better Futures in Sexuality Education for Disabled People: A Critical Analysis Through the Lens of Disability Justice and the Neurodiversity Paradigm; Morrigan Hunter, Cherry Kaufman, and Arkadiy Akhtenberg
Chapter 6. Nothing Instinctive About It: Revealing and Resisting Normative Constructions of Sex in Autistic Sexual Narratives; Celeste Jasmine Cash
Chapter 7. Bridging Critical Disability Studies and Cute Studies: Insights Into the Intersections of Intellectual Disability and Sexuality; Alan Santinele Martino, Thomas Tri, Jordan Parks, and Feihao Wang
Chapter 8. Partment fDisability, Desire, and Digital Platforms: Examining Self-Representation and Connection Online; Brennah Kamelchuk and Alan Santinele Martino



