Nineteenth–Century Disability

Cultures and Contexts

Karen Bourrier, Boston University, Project Director; Christopher Keep, Project Advisor, Western University | Jun 10, 2021

Nineteenth-Century Disability: Cultures and Contexts is an interdisciplinary collection of primary texts and images about physical and cognitive disability in the long nineteenth century. Each piece has been selected and annotated by scholars in the field, with the aim of helping university level instructors and students incorporate a disability studies perspective into their classes and scholarship through access to contextualized primary sources.


Tags: Europe Latin America North America United States Primary Sources Timelines African American Book & Media Cultural Disability Latinx Material Culture Medicine, Science, & Technology Public Slavery Visual Culture 1600-1800 1900-1945


Comment

Please read our commenting and letters policy before submitting.