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ABOUT US by Peter Catapano

ABOUT US

Essays From the New York Times' Disability Series

edited by Peter Catapano & Rosemarie Garland-Thomson

Pub Date: Sept. 3rd, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-63149-585-4
Publisher: Liveright/Norton

Disabled essayists reflect on love, joy, justice, community, and navigating daily challenges.

For three years, the New York Times has hosted “Disability,” a weekly series of essays by and about people with disabilities. The newspaper’s opinion editor Catapano (co-editor: Modern Ethics in 77 Arguments: A Stone Reader, 2016, etc.) and disabilities scholar Garland-Thomson (English and Bioethics/Emory Univ.; Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture and Literature, 1997, etc.) have selected some 60 pieces from the series, amply fulfilling their aim of representing the diversity and richness of human experience. Although the contributors all have access to language, therefore representing only a partial demographic of the disabled, they discuss common issues, such as the desire for independence balanced with the need for intimacy and caring. As psychologist Andrew Solomon (who was diagnosed with depression) writes in the introduction, the book “is really in many ways about how we seek meaning in who we are rather than in who we might have wished to be.” The essayists convey with uncommon candor how they live with disabilities that include blindness, deafness, panic attacks, anxiety, depression, cerebral palsy, stuttering, paralysis, and Tourette’s. As Garland-Thomson notes, disability can affect anyone, suddenly and randomly: “An oncoming car in the wrong direction can transform the person we think we are today to a different one tomorrow. No other social identity category is so porous and unstable.” Several writers found themselves disabled after an accident or injury; others were born with anomalies. Garland-Thomson, for example, has a rare genetic condition that resulted in her having disproportionate arm lengths and only six fingers. Living in a world built for “the fully fingered,” she proved to be resourceful in “developing practical workarounds for the life demands my body did not meet.” Many writers praise the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, which helped individuals meet their needs by requiring such adaptions as ramps, Braille materials, hearing assistance equipment, elevators, special parking places, and pedestrian curb cuts. Although several writers resist being called inspiring, their eloquent essays are nothing less.

A rich, moving collection.