This issue draws together poets, critics, and hybrid
practitioners in the fields of contemporary poetics and disability studies to
posit new approaches to experimental aesthetic practices that interrogate and
represent the social, political, and mediated realities of disability. The
issue will bring together work on contemporary poets and artists with new takes
on earlier experimental poetry, and will build on the work of Sheila Black,
Jennifer Bartlett, and Michael Northen, editors of Beauty is a Verb: The New
Poetry of Disability (Cinco Puntos Press, 2011) to include new work in
disability poetics from a wide range of aesthetic practices, media, and
orientations.
We welcome papers that situates disability in dialogue with
analyses of class, race, sexuality, immigration status, and other forms of
social precarity, as well as work that situates disability poetics within
local, national, transnational, and planetary scales of instability and shift.
We encourage essays that will read disability across fields and situate the
body as a site of lived experience within environmental and social systems that
press upon it. This special issue is in dialogue with the New Disability
Poetics Symposium, that was held at the University of Pennsylvania in October
of 2018. As a continuation of that symposium, we encourage new points of
collaboration between disability studies and poetics that provide new avenues
of inquiry for work by poets and theorists with disabilities.
In our commitment to providing accessible modes of
engagement with the themes of new disability poetics, this special issue will
explore new possibilities for public scholarship when disability and bodily
difference are foregrounded. To this end, essays that explore different
critical modes of accessibility, such as audio essays, video essays, enlarged
font, and articles that examine technology and disability together are strongly
encouraged. All content in this issue will be presented in multiple formats (large
print and audio, with some pieces containing video and other formats) to
support an inclusive public conversation on poetry and disability.
Possible topics include and are not limited to:
- Disability and technology
- Performance and the body
- Trans/feminist and queer theories of disability
- Critical race studies and disability poetics
- Space, site, and accessibility
- Disability and the postcolonial
- Connections between disability activism and creative practice
- Care ethics and caring labor
- Theories and representations of illness
- Disaster and the body
- Indigenous approaches to disability and poetics
Proposals for articles of 300 words are due June 15.
Completed articles of 4,000-8,000 words are due to the special issue editors
Orchid Tierney, Knar Gavin, and Davy Knittle on September 1, 2019. Please
direct questions, abstracts, and full articles to newdisabilitypoetics@gmail.com.
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