Faye Ginsburg
and Rayna Rapp,
"The Difference that Disability Makes: Reproductive Justice Through a Wider Lens"
(page 3 of 5)
Based on our research, it is apparent that advocacy is
widespread—often crossing class and race lines; parental vigilance, with rare
exceptions, is almost a requirement if a child is to receive appropriate
services. We also underscore that the meaning of educational
credentials—and what it means to have LD—has changed due to a number
of developments that have greatly enhanced the social acceptance of
children with disabilities. Central to this shift in the
zeitgeist is the familial expectation of their rights as
citizens, including the rights of their children to a "free and
appropriate public education," despite the uneven distribution of
services and the complexities of current bureaucracies and educational
law. In other words, we argue that parents (and especially mothers) are
increasingly engaging in advocacy on behalf of their children—from
modest efforts such as fighting for a classroom placement, to deeply
engaged actions of those who organize "speak-outs" and demonstrations at
City Hall in support of inclusive education. While stratification
remains an enduring aspect of American education, advocacy is also
increasingly broadly distributed. Indeed, we would suggest that one of
the under-recognized legacies passed on from the activist parents is the
growing recognition of the necessity of all kinds of parents—and
especially mothers—to learn to "work the system" on behalf of their
atypical children. Of course, this does not solve the inequalities of
the system and the fact that most families are not engaged in these
processes on behalf of their children; as we explain below, simply
navigating the system can be overwhelming and intimidating.
With nearly every interview, we heard stories about how families have
had to reimagine everything from household budgets to school careers, to
sibling relations, to models of humanity that take into account life
with a difference. We argue that the stories our respondents told us
about living with disability—from the moment of birth
onward—collectively constitute a "new kinship imaginary" with temporal and
social implications. Not only does this new imaginary map an emergent
terrain that encompasses a broader range of humanity; it also reframes
the implicit norms and expectations of the consequences of
reproduction over the life course as the "difference of disability"
reverberates through the domestic cycle, changing its rhythms in
unanticipated ways.
These reverberations and their impact on cultural imaginaries are
thus fundamental to our analysis, bringing us back to kinship, a human
system that is resilient, demanding, and—at its best—adaptable.
Such "new kinship imaginaries" are widely distributed in ethnographic
research on ARTs as well as queer theory and science studies that
demonstrate innovations in kin relations to accommodate new technologies
of life: radical transformations in intimate relations are normalized in
the language and practices of familism. Some of these
differences—such as the use of assistive reproductive technologies during a limited
period of their domestic cycle for couples with problematic
fertility—are more easily absorbed into typical family narratives once a healthy
pregnancy is achieved. Other kinds of difference, such as 'queer
kinship' or the incorporation of disabilities into family life that is
our topic, endure in publicly visible ways over the domestic cycle, thus
requiring new kinship imaginaries at every level, from family rituals to
state bureaucracies. We have been struck in our work that kinship ties
are 'everywhere,' a diffuse and powerful 'back story' to not only a
changing kinship imaginary but also a transforming social narrative.
It isn't just the powerful resignification of kinship between
children with disabilities and their parents and other relatives as
transformative that we want to note.[2]
Coming to grips with learning
disabilities leads not only to potential activism, but to the changed
shape of a life cycle for that child and his/her intimate others, and
their domestic cycles as well. When a child's education is "stretched
out" to accommodate difference, so is the time of parenting. When
children are excluded from school or must be represented in a battle to
access and retain services, so, too, does the domestic unit change to
incorporate such struggles and exclusions. When a child's developmental
narrative is rewritten by a relatively late diagnosis, so, too, is the
family's sense of its history refashioned. When family members
experience a "dead end" in the search for innovative services or
therapies that might enhance the life of their disabled members, some
may become inventors, researchers, project-providers. When children
grow through adolescence into a trajectory that does not entail the
expected reproduction of class and culture, they travel into an
unanticipated future, taking their families along with them. It is in
this absence of a recognized kinship narrative, we suggest, that
families create new kinship imaginaries, and it is to some examples of
these to which we now turn.
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