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DTSTART:19960101T000000 END:STANDARD BEGIN:STANDARD TZNAME:GMT TZOFFSETFROM:+0100 TZOFFSETTO:+0000 DTSTART:19961027T020000 RRULE:FREQ=YEARLY;BYMONTH=10;BYDAY=-1SU END:STANDARD END:VTIMEZONE BEGIN:VEVENT DTSTAMP:20260510T231535Z DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20200204T160000 DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20200204T180000 SUMMARY:seminar: New Histories of Disability TZID:Europe/London UID:20200204-8a1785d86d3ece05016d44ad59fb374e@warwick.ac.uk CREATED:20200129T103412Z DESCRIPTION:Presentation\, refreshments\, discussion. All are welcome. Di sability history has become established as an important aspect of the hi story of health. It has provided insights on how disabled people were id entified and discriminated against from able-bodied-majority societies\, as well as questioning various historical assumptions about ‘normality’ is constructed. As we enter a new decade\, what new approaches are we l ikely to see\, and what new questions will disability history allow us t o ask of the past? Claire Shaw chairs this seminar which takes three pap ers from scholars at the Centre for the History of Medicine whose work c ontributes to these new histories of disability. Andrew Burchell will pr esent his research into speech therapy and stammering\, showing both how the condition was constructed over time and how people with stammers ha ve had to campaign for their rights by positioning themselves uneasily b etween medical and social conceptions of disability. Samir Hamdoud is di scussing Dr George E. Shuttleworth’s post-mortems on children and how Sh uttleworth was able to operationalise forms of deficiency in childhood t hrough an ideology of caring power. Beckie Rutherford will demonstrate h ow the activist group Gemma’s newsletters can be used to uncover the liv es of disabled people in the past and contribute to new understandings a bout the intersection of disability with other identity categories such as gender and sexuality. Andrew Burchell Stammering\, Speech Therapy and Disability in the Twentieth Century The history of speech therapy and s tammering sit uneasily within the history of disability. For a long time occupying a liminal position within categorisations and frameworks\, th is paper explores two interconnected themes surrounding stammering and i ts 'treatment'. Firstly\, how understandings of stammering have been con structed over time. Secondly\, how - as a consequence of its uncertain h istory - more recent efforts to campaign for the rights of people with s tammers have been forced to position themselves uneasily between medical and social conceptions of disability. Samir Hamdoud Dr George E. Shuttl eworth and The Caring Eye: Post-Mortems\, Anatomical Science and Childho od at the Royal Albert From 1870 to 1920\, thousands of children of vari ous backgrounds and personalities had experienced care\, education and p hysiological treatment at the Royal Albert Institution (hereafter after RAI). Many were also subject to post-mortems. These are recorded in case file entries for children and in the writings and collection of visual materials of Dr George E. Shuttleworth who spent 23 years as the institu tion’s medical superintendent. This paper considers the practice\, funct ions\, and impact of the post-mortem at the RAI within a wider discussio n of the visualisation of mental and physiological pathology in Victoria n and Edwardian Britain. It foregrounds the place of post-mortems - and the visual documentation which accompanied them - in the developing scie nces of anatomical psychology and physiology. It argues that Dr Shuttlew orth was able to operationalise forms of deficiency in childhood (in its various guises – idiocy\, imbecility\, feeblemindedness etc) via social networks of anatomical science\, observational practices of medicine an d through an ideology of “caring power”. The paper draws attention to th e ways in which these factors led to the mobilisation and dissection of many children’s bodies in the quest to define\, refine and treat mental and physical disease entities. Beckie Rutherford ‘I started a new life w hen I joined Gemma’: Disabled Women’s Organising\, 1976 - 1992. This pap er will discuss the history of Gemma\, a support group for disabled and non-disabled lesbians and bisexual women that formed in 1976. For many d ecades\, Gemma acted as a crucial site of connection and communication\, helping to combat the isolation experienced by many queer disabled wome n across Britain. The conversations that took place within Gemma’s newsl etters offer keen insight into popular understandings of disability in t his period and\, in particular\, how it intersected with other identity categories such as gender and sexuality. I will explore these ideas and then discuss more generally how Gemma’s history is useful for rethinking some of the broader questions animating the field of disability history . LOCATION:R0.14 Ramphal building\, University of TV CATEGORIES:History Dept calendar,seminar LAST-MODIFIED:20200129T103412Z ORGANIZER;CN=Sheilagh Holmes: END:VEVENT END:VCALENDAR