HIST 6693

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HIST 6693

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2024-2025. Courses of Study 2024-2025 is scheduled to publish mid-June.

Disabilities, broadly defined, are not exclusively clinical phenomena that belong to the realm of healthcare professionals and rehabilitation specialists. Instead, disability is a lived human experience that is always already embedded in a set of socially constructed ideas that change over time, across cultures, and in relation to race, gender, class and sexuality. Disability is embodied but also discursively constituted, shaped by social injustice and the built environment, and often rendered paradoxically visible and invisible in an ableist and audist world. This seminar explores these complex dynamics and the ways that disability – as an experience and a category of analysis – illuminates new interpretations of major themes and developments in American history like labor, citizenship, immigration, medicine, and activism.

When Offered Fall.

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: graduate students.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi: none
  •   Regular Academic Session.  Combined with: HIST 4693SHUM 4693SHUM 6693

  • 3 Credits Opt NoAud

  • 19729 HIST 6693   SEM 101

    • R
    • Aug 26 - Dec 9, 2024
    • Staff