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Oct 11 2018

SPEAKING IN TONGUES: Disability and Disableism

October 11, 2018

3:30 PM - 5:30 PM

Location

Institute for the Humanities

Address

Stevenson Hall, Lower Level, 701 S Morgan St., Chicago, IL 60607

UIC Disability Cultural Center Presents:

SPEAKING IN TONGUES: Disability and Disableism

Lecture by Jim I. Charlton

Disability studies claims that disability is socially constructed. This new “social’’  model or approach is an important advance over previous theories about the condition of disability and disabled persons that are rooted in medicine, psychology, and therapy. This model though has numerous big problems. This talk is a defense of the model by criticizing it. The social model is flawed: long live the social model.

James I. Charlton, Research Assistant Professor of Disability and Human Development at UIC and author of Nothing About Us Without Us, is a frequent lecturer in the United States and abroad on many aspects of disability and the disability rights movement.

October 11th, 2018
3:30 pm
Institute for the Humanities
Stevenson Hall, Lower Level

Real-time captioning (CART) and sign-language interpreters will be provided. Please do not wear scented products. To request additional accessibility services, please email dcc@uic.edu.

Presented by the Disability Cultural Center and the Institute for the Humanities

Download the flyer

Contact

Disability Cultural Center

Date posted

Sep 28, 2018

Date updated

Sep 28, 2018