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Chapter 6 (in ‘Exploring the Divide, edited by Colin Barnes and Geof
Mercer, 1996, Leeds: The Disability Press, pp. 94 – 113).
DISABILITY, IDENTITY AND DIFFERENCE
Tom Shakespeare
INTRODUCTION
Within social theory, questions of disability identity bridge key contemporary
debates, including the structure/ agency problem and the biology/ society
dualism. It is my purpose to survey some of these issues and try to chart a
way through these dichotomies. Identity is a complex field, and social
psychologists, sociologists, political scientists, cultural critics and
philosophers all use the word variously and in different contexts.
Furthermore, the demands of a political movement and the development of
social theory may run in contradictory directions - one pragmatic and
instrumental, the other more concerned with complexity and nuance.
Disability Studies prioritises faithfulness to lived experience, certainly, but
also internal coherence and theoretical adequacy.
Initially, I want to foreground two specific uses of identity which illustrate a
significant tension in the disability debate. First, we can talk about identifying
as an active verb, as much as to say uncovering disabled people or
discovering disabled people. Second, we can use identity in a reflexive
sense, in terms of identifying oneself, which is about staking a claim to
membership of a collective or a wider group. Michel Foucault talks about
these differences in the concept of identity. He suggests we are made into
subjects from above, through surveillance and control operating through the
state, through schools and other agencies, and we make ourselves into
subjects from below, where he mainly talks about the processes of
confession and communication, people `speaking the truth about
themselves'. I think this distinction is also what he meant, from personal
experience, when he argued `one should not be a homosexual, but one who
clings passionately to the idea of being gay' (quoted by Kritzman, 1988, xxiii).
This paper seeks to contextualise the social model within wider models of
disability, and to look at the identity options for disabled people. Parallels are
drawn with the experiences of women, lesbians and gays, and black people,
and post-structuralist concepts are used to problematise the issue of identity.
I suggest that recent political developments offer disabled people new
opportunities in how they identify. A useful metaphor is that of story telling:
identity is an aspect of the stories we tell to ourselves, and to others.
Sociology itself could be conceived in terms of form of story-telling. For
example, Ken Plummer's recent work uses the concept of story to explore the
way that people understand and represent their sexual experiences - for
example, as lesbians and gays `coming out' (Plummer, 1995). I suggest that
similar processes in self-understanding are going on in the field of disability
identity. Previously there was a limited range of narrative devices and
themes available to people with impairment: now, new stories are being told,
and we are creating ourselves for ourselves, rather than relying on the
traditional narratives of biomedical intervention or rehabilitation, of misery,
decline and death. Doing it for ourselves, perhaps we can reconcile tensions
and produce alternative, happier endings.
IDENTIFYING DISABLED PEOPLE
Let me distinguish two main approaches to identifying disabled people as a
group, one based in a physical or medical understanding, the other based in
a socio-cultural understanding: this may be simplistic, but I find the distinction
useful for heuristic purposes. I will then go on to subdivide the social
identifications further.
The first approach conceives of disability as the outcome of impairment: it is
a form of biological determinism, because it focuses on physical difference.
Disabled people are defined as that group of people whose bodies do not
work; or look different or act differently; or who cannot do productive work.
The key elements of this analysis are performing and conforming: both raise
the question of normality, because this approach assumes a certain standard
from which disabled people deviate.
Often, this approach does not identify `the disabled' as such, but focuses on
particular groups of people with impairment - for example `the blind' or
`epileptics'. Here we see a denial of the common social experiences which
unite disabled people, and a focus on medical dimensions of difference. It is
as if we did not speak of Black British people, but instead highlighted
Bangladeshi, Jamaican, Guyanese or Sri Lankan people in Britain.
Obviously, there are times when ethnic origin is important, but there is a
danger of overlooking the unities in the experience of Black British people,
and also of essentialising difference.
A wider problem, which is revealed in the confusions of quantitative social
research such as the 1988 OPCS Disability Surveys, or exhaustive
categorisations such as the International Classification of Impairments,
Disabilities and Handicaps, is that everyone is impaired (Sutherland, 1981).
We are dealing with an aspect of the human condition, not with the attribute
of a specific and identifiable minority. There are differences of degree,
although it proves contentious to draw a line, but these are not qualitative
differences. If everyone is impaired, we face difficulties if we seek to identify
disabled people on the basis that they experience particular physical deficits
not shared by the majority population. For example, recent Human Genome
research has highlighted the fact that everyone carries four or five recessive
genes which would cause genetic disease in an offspring, if the other parent
was also a carrier.
Furthermore, I believe that a situation where disabled people are defined by
their physicality can only be sustained in a situation where non-disabled
people have denied their own physicality (Shakespeare, 1994). If everyone is
impaired, then we should look at the ways in which a specific group in
society, namely non-disabled people, ignore their experience of impairment
and physical limitation. Perhaps the maintenance of a non-disabled identity in
the context of physical limitation is a more useful problem with which to be
concerned: rather than interrogating the other, let us rather deconstruct the
normality-which-is-to-be-assumed. This way of thinking about identity has
recently been usefully explored in the context of HIV/AIDS (Crawford, 1994).
Moving on to the second approach, disability has been conceived as an
outcome of social processes or as a constructed or created category. The
social model concept, arising from the social movement of disabled people,
and developed by Disability Studies sociologists is the classic example. But
one of the points of the current paper is to suggest that while this materialist
approach is one route to the social identification of disabled people, there are
other fruitful options.
Let me highlight five options for identifying disability as a social process:
1. The social model, which focuses on the disability as a relationship
between people with impairment and a discriminatory society: disability is
defined as the outcome of disabling barriers imposed by environmental or
policy interventions. It suggests a strategy of barrier removal, or education to
remove prejudice, with the goal of inclusion. Disabled people, in this
approach, do not want anything extra, but wish to be treated the same as
non-disabled people. In the social model, there is nothing to distinguish
people with impairment who are socially disabled, from people with
dependent children who are socially disabled. A whole range of people may
in fact be disabled by barriers or prejudices.
2. The minority group approach, in which disabled people are an
oppressed group. This is a weaker claim than the social model, focusing on
power politics and identity politics, while not necessarily problematising
disability itself. It could be associated with North American disability
movement approaches, and has a general resonance within self-organised
disability politics. That is, it often co-exists with the first option, although I will
argue that there are tensions between a focus on removing disabling
barriers, and opposing the oppression of disabled people as a minority group.
For example, a minority group approach may advocate special measures, or
a comprehensive disability income, or a bigger share of social resources. In
a pioneering, if ultimately unsatisfactory analysis, Helen Liggett has
highlighted the dangers of a minority group approach which reinforces the
constitution of disability (Liggett, 1988, p. 271).
3. A Weberian or Foucauldian approach in which disability is a category of
social policy. This is epitomised by the work of Deborah Stone (Stone, 1985).
A parallel could be drawn with Mary McIntosh's work locating the creation of
a homosexual role (McIntosh, 1968): in the same way, we could look at how
the development of industrial capitalism in the nineteenth century, through
the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act, set up a distinction between the
deserving and the undeserving poor which has influenced social policy up to
the present day and led to the identification of the disability category. As with
other approaches, this shifts the attention from the person with impairment to
the statutory or policy processes which construct him/ her as officially
disabled. Robert Scott's work, from a labelling perspective, could usefully be
included under this heading (Scott, 1969).
4. Disability as the outcome of definitions inherent in social research
methods, for example in the OPCS Disability Surveys. The work of Abberley
(1992) and others shows how survey instruments construct a category fairly
arbitrarily, resulting in the idea that there are approximately six million
disabled people in Britain. Methodological criticism of the type advanced by
Kitsuse and Cicourel (1963), or by Hindess (1973), illustrates the
weaknesses of such empiricism.
5. Disability as a cultural category. This approach, drawing upon the
notion of cultural representation, has precedents in the work of Sontag
(1991), and is also related to Foucault's concept of discursive formations.
Elsewhere I have looked at this in terms of prejudice, focusing on
stereotypes, language and the creation of meaning. Using the notion of
otherness, I suggested that the processes of denial and projection are
involved in the cultural construction of disability (Shakespeare, 1994).
By offering a range of ways of understanding disability as a social
construction, I do not thereby intend to abandon the social model's stress on
material, environmental and policy factors. But rather than reducing the
category `disability' to a straightforward social relation, I think an analysis of
discursive practices offers a richer and more complex picture of disability. It is
in this sense, rather than the narrow phenomenological sense, that I would
say disability is socially constructed, and would highlight the benefits of a
Foucauldian analysis, regarding disability as a process of subjection.
Ian Hacking has developed an interesting account of what he calls `making
up people' which draws upon McIntosh's `homosexual role hypothesis' and
has relevance to my argument here. Thus he describes as `dynamic
nominalism' the suggestion that:
`numerous kinds of human beings and human acts come into being
hand in hand with our invention of the categories labelling them'
(Hacking, 1986, p. 236).
This casts light on the various forms of social construction of disability
outlined above. To me, this also indicates that we would be right to see
recent disability politics as opening up new narrative possibilities for
individual identity, which may have been unavailable before. As Hacking
argues:
`Making up people changes the space of possibilities for personhood'
(Hacking, 1986, p. 229).
Below I will consider some of these developments.
DISABLED PEOPLE IDENTIFYING
Medical approaches consider negative self identity to be an outcome of
physical impairment, and focus on the need for adjustment, mourning, and
coming to terms with loss. Social approaches view negative self-identity as a
result of the experience of oppressive social relations, and focus attention on
the possibilities for changing society, empowering disabled people, and
promoting a different self-understanding.
A particularly useful metaphor for understanding both approaches is provided
by the concept of identity as narrative, which focuses on the stories we tell
about ourselves and our lives, and constructs accounts which encompass
plot, causality and conflict. This offers the potential for a nuanced model of
identity which resists the temptation straightforwardly to read off identity from
context, or indeed embodiment. Giddens summarises this approach to self-
identity:
`Self-identity is not a distinctive trait, or even a collection of traits,
possessed by the individual. It is the self as reflexively understood by
the person in terms of her or his biography' (Giddens, 1991, p.53).
Identity therefore connects the social and the personal and involves the
individual putting themselves in a collective context.
`A person's identity is not to be found in behaviour nor - important
though this is - in the reaction of others, but in the capacity to keep a
particular narrative going' (Giddens, 1991, p.54).
Jeffrey Weeks has suggested, in the context of gay liberation, that the
concept of identity is like finding a map to explore a new country (Weeks,
1977). Both these metaphors connect with the idea of representation, of
giving meaning, or of charting a way through, spatially or temporally. They
also highlight the importance of identity for political developments: positive
identity narratives are reinforced by self-organisation, and are a condition for
it.
The experience of disability as a negative identity arises out of a process of
socialisation, or in the context of social relations, in which impairment is the
sole focus of analysis. Grief and loss are turned inwards, and suffering
focuses on the self. In the absence of other socially sanctioned identities, the
professional cripple role enables successful interaction with professionals,
offering the benefits of sympathy and concern on the part of others. It could
be conceived in terms of a tendency to `blame the victim', to convert public
issues in personal woes. As an individualised experience, the structural and
cultural context is not challenged, and alternatives to the dominant
biomedical paradigm are not available. Difference is either fetishised, as
medical tragedy, or ignored. Assimilation is the name of the game.
The person with impairment may have an investment in their own incapacity,
because it can become the rationale for their own failure. The legitimation
accorded them by non-disabled people is predicated on accepting
responsibility for their own incapacity, and not challenging the dominant
order. Indeed, they may become token examples of the tragedy of disability,
involved in consultations or wheeled out to highlight the problems.
Alternatively, various forms of denial may be involved, where a person claims
to be `really normal' and tries to minimise the importance of impairment in
their lives, perhaps by concealment: in Goffman's (1968) terms, they may
pass as normal. As he highlighted, this involves considerable tensions and
difficulties of managing information or interaction. Other similar strategies
may include religious identification with suffering - a resignation to fate or the
will of God. Such quietist acceptance involves enduring the difficulties of
impairment, possible in the expectation of heavenly compensation. Finally,
another form of denial seeks to `overcome' impairment. Often a strategy
associated with masculine expectations, it involves a refusal to submit to
reality, and an attempt to regain a normal identity through superhuman
activity and endurance, for example in the case of many sporting activities.
While these various alternatives all demonstrate the use of narratives of self,
I would argue that none are psychologically or socially healthy or
progressive. They all involve an element of denial or failure to come to terms:
they all involve a significant element of external definition, of accepting
external disempowering agendas. A temporary or compromise identity may
be developed, but it is frail, and ultimately has costs for personal
psychological happiness and security. By focusing on the body and the
individual, the disabled person is trapped in a prison not of their own
devising, and cannot escape except through strategies which are ultimately
self-defeating.
Disability as a positive identity is a process, to use Foucauldian language,
where subjection opens up the possibility of subjectification:
`From popular culture to government policy, society has evidently
assigned you a membership. Identity politics turns necessity to virtue'
(Girlin, 1994, p.153).
This alternative to the negative identification with impairment is provided by
those who resist the negative implications of the medical model and develop
a response which focuses on the exclusion and injustice which characterises
disability. This shift often takes the form of replacing one analytical
framework (the `medical model') with another (the `social model') to lead to a
more positive identity, often described as `coming out'. This `coming out' is
the process of positive self-identification, rejecting the categorisation of
subjection, and affirming subjectivity and collective power. It is about
developing new definitions and new political forms. Frances Hasler (1993)
describes it as the `big idea' which underpinned the self-organised disabled
people's movement in Britain.
While this can be a private and individual development or personal
awakening, it is more likely to take place in a collective context: self-
organisation itself prompts the process of identification. Even segregated
institutions, such as the Le Court Cheshire home where Paul Hunt lived, can
enable disabled activists to foster a response to exclusion (Hunt, 1966).
Jeffrey Weeks focuses on this feeling of shared identity:
`Identity is about belonging, about what you have in common with some
other people and what differentiates you from others. At its most basic,
it gives you a sense of personal location, the stable core to your
individuality' (Weeks, 1990, p. 88).
Elsewhere I have discussed the relationship between self-organisation and
the development of disability as a political identity, and developed
comparisons with the women's movement and the civil rights movement
(Shakespeare, 1993). Critically, both self-organisation and direct action are
processes with implications for identity, as well as instrumental goals: to
quote a social theorist,
`The actors mobilise to regain control of their own action. They try to
reclaim the right to define themselves against the criteria of
identification determined by an anonymous power and systems of
regulation that penetrate the area of "internal nature" ' (Melucci, 1989,
p.61).
The disability movement provides the collective context for political
identification; it involves processes which challenge views of disabled people
as incapable, powerless and passive; and it establishes disabled people as
the experts on disability and disabled people's definitions as the most
appropriate approaches to disability, rather than the traditional domination of
professionals.
`The move towards self-organisation has prompted increasing numbers
of disabled people to adopt a shared political identity which in turn has
helped to build a new mood of confidence. Disabled people no longer
ask for change, but demand it. They are prepared to use a whole range
of tactics in pursuit of their demands, including direct action and civil
disobedience' (Bynoe, Barnes and Oliver, 1991, p. 12).
Alongside political activism, cultural forms of self-provision, otherwise known
as disability arts, develop a sense of shared cultural identity which is central
to these processes:
`Disability arts also provides a context in which disabled people can get
together, enjoy themselves and think in some way about issues of
common concern. But it goes deeper than that, as disability culture
really does offer people a key to the basic process of identifying as a
disabled person, because culture and identity are closely linked
concepts. Simply naming the idea I think has encouraged a lot of
disabled people to happily call themselves so and to be more up front
and confident about themselves and that is also giving more confidence
to the movement as a whole' (Sian Vasey, quoted in Lees, ed., 1992, p.
13).
Challenging stereotypes, building solidarity, recounting new stories, are all
about developing a disability culture. These processes are also about new
options for disability identity:
`To encourage the growth of a disability culture is no less than to begin
the radical task of transforming ourselves from passive and dependent
beings into active and creative agents for social change' (Morrison and
Finkelstein, in Lees, ed., 1992, p.22).
I hope it has been demonstrated that the three aspects of disability identity -
political, cultural and personal - are linked. By offering potential for
subjectivity, for a changed self-understanding and an increased sense of
personal power, self-organisation offers a way out of the traps of negative
identification. From self-blame, one is enabled to blame exclusionary social
processes; rather than explaining one's situation in terms of personal failure,
one can justify one's identity on the basis of discrimination and prejudice.
This is about embracing identity and coming to terms with one's political
status in the world. What is more, it is about opening up the possibility of
changing one's world.
Although I have implied that the process of positive identification is
straightforward and simple, I would argue it is difficult and complex. Below, I
will highlight particular issues, but here I want to suggest that positive
identification should be seen as a project, rather than a once-for-all definition
or event, a project based on self-recognition and recognition by others.
Calhoun argues that the politics of personal identity and the politics of
collective identity are inextricably linked:
`Identities are often personal and political projects in which we
participate, empowered to a greater or lesser extent by resources of
experience and ability, culture and social organisation' (Calhoun, 1990,
p. 28).
Sometimes a focus on political campaigning and political change can mask
an equally urgent need to work on psychological obstacles to feeling
empowered and effective. Surviving oppression can leave a legacy of
distress and difficulty, and those who appear most strident and strong in the
political arena can carry a burden of self-hatred and internalised oppression
which makes psycho-social fulfilment precarious and problematic. There is a
parallel with the arguments of the French psychoanalytical feminist group
Psych et Po, who referred to the futility of activism without awareness of
internal conflict as the danger of the `phallus inside one's head' (Duchen,
1987, p.47ff). While Disability Studies has presented a dichotomy between
the medical model and the social model, few have raised the issue of
individual psychology: I would suggest that both object relations and
psychoanalytical approaches offer potential benefits for those exploring
disabled people's experiences, and that such analyses are long overdue.
IDENTITY PROBLEMS
Rather than propose a simple and triumphalist model of identity formation, I
want to suggest there are major obstacles to developing a positive and
strong disabled identity. It would not be accurate to trace a neat trajectory
between being constructed as a category of otherness, and then being able
to use this as a source of strength. There is nothing inevitable or determined
about the process, and there are major difficulties with successfully and
positively identifying as disabled. As Weeks says in the context of sexuality:
`Oppression does not produce an automatic response, but it does
provide the conditions with which the oppressed can begin to develop
their own consciousness and identity' (Weeks, 1977, p.33).
First, disabled people are socialised to think of ourselves as inferior. Within
dominant discourses of subjection, as I have outlined earlier, strong
messages of physical difference and personal deficit are reinforced:
`The messages we receive are very strong and clear and we have little
access to different values which may place a more positive value on
our bodies, ourselves and our lives. Our self image is thus dominated
by the non-disabled world's reaction to us' (Morris, 1991, p.28).
People are socialised into thinking of disability in a medical model way. We
can view this as internalised oppression. Paolo Freire analyses this:
`Self-depreciation is another characteristic of the oppressed, which
derives from their internalisation of the opinion the oppressors hold of
them. So often do they hear that they are good for nothing, know
nothing, and are incapable of learning anything - that they are sick,
lazy and unproductive - that in the end they become convinced of their
own unfitness' (Freire, 1972, p.38).
In the case of disabled people, this is reinforced by segregated education,
negative images, cultural representation, absence of positive role models,
social treatment of disabled people. It parallels the experience of women in
patriarchal societies. We could develop a distinction between people born
with impairment, who have no alternative to viewing themselves as deficient,
and people becoming impaired, who have to relinquish a non-disabled
identity and accept an identity as other. Similarly,
` "Becoming a homosexual"; is a difficult process of "becoming the
other"; or "becoming what one has learned to despise"; As such it is an
individual and privatised process, the "intolerable reality", being a
confrontation with oneself rather than being an open struggle with an
easily located oppressor' (Gay Left Collective, 1980, p.80).
Coming out is difficult and precarious for both groups.
Second, disabled people are isolated and separated from one another, and
from sources of collective support and strength.
`One of the most important features of our experience of prejudice is
that we generally experience it as isolated individuals. Many of us
spend most of our lives in the company of non-disabled people,
whether in our families, with friends, in the workplace, at school and so
on. Most of the people we have dealings with, including our most
intimate relationships, are not like us. It is therefore very difficult for us
to recognise and challenge the values and judgements that are applied
to us and our lives. Our ideas about disability and about ourselves are
generally formed by those who are not disabled' (Morris, 1991, p.37).
While women and black people can expect support role-models from within
the family and community, disabled people are likely to grow up in families
where there are not other disabled people, and where there is a parental
burden of guilt and shame. This highlights a difference between disability,
and race and gender, disability is more like sexuality, in the sense of familial
isolation, and the need to come out and reject the burden of difference. No
discussion of the obstacles to identifying as disabled would be complete if it
did not raise questions about the different resources, narratives and
possibilities available to different groups of disabled people, whether based
on age, impairment or other social distinctions. At this stage I will turn to
some of these questions.
Having presented a fairly schematic model of disability identity, I want to
focus on tensions and difficulties in the concept. Some of this lies in the
division between the needs of a social movement, which often deals in
simple dichotomies, and produces polemical arguments, and an academic
approach, which has a responsibility to be rigorous, which is more focused
on nuance and contradiction, and which, in the current era especially, often
justifies its existence in terms of deconstruction and elaboration. However, I
think the issues I will highlight all have major political connections, and are
not merely problems of theory or the ivory tower. What is more they are
linked, and they link disability identity into wider social theoretical debates
with which disabled people, and Disability Studies in particular, have to
engage.
Jenny Morris, and other disabled feminists have highlighted difficulties in
reconciling the reality of impairment and the lived experience of disability with
the sometimes social reductionist social model. Given the other debates
consecutive with this paper, I will not engage deeply with these issues. But
certainly, the fact that people with impairments associated with ageing are
not fully represented within the disability movement points to an issue of
identity and identification. For example, looking at Jenny Morris's two most
recent books on disability, the interviewees are all under the age of sixty,
while the majority of disabled people are over the age of sixty. Some
impairments - the congenital impairments for example, or those associated
with accident or with early onset - are more likely than others to lead to
individual identifying collectively and socially as disabled.
Traditional approaches to disability, highlighted above, could be considered
to be essentialist. Differences, biological and sometimes psychological,
separate disabled people from non-disabled people. Social approaches
counter this essentialism by demonstrating how it is exclusionary policies,
environmental barriers and a process of social oppression which create the
category of disability. This is a social constructionist analysis. For example, it
is suggested that the experience of disability varies at different times and in
different cultural contexts. Political strategies focus on barrier removal. But
between and within this dichotomy of essentialism and social constructionism
there are debates which have been explored by feminists and queer
theorists, and still await Disability Studies.
For example, despite the seeming social constructionism, there is an inherent
essentialism within disability politics, and indeed in the idea of disability
identity. The celebration of disability pride is the celebration of difference, and
the acceptance of difference: it is about subverting negative valuation and
reclaiming disability. Nietzsche suggests:
`A species comes to be, at type becomes fixed, in the long fight against
essentially constant adverse conditions' (Nietzsche, 1990, p.199).
This means that what does not kill you, makes you strong. It also means,
accepting a category created by others, revelling in abnormality, celebrating
the margins. While the social model is social constructionist, the social
oppression model can slide into essentialism. While the disability movement
seeks inclusion and integration, it also celebrates difference. The margins are
a good place to speak from, and there is a cost to coming into the
mainstream. But celebrating and identifying in difference can be risky - for
example, recuperating the term `cripple':
`The dangerous intimacy between subjectification and subjection needs
careful calibration' (Riley, 1988, p.17).
The work of Helen Liggett (1988) shows the risks of reinforcing the
categorisation of disabled people as a separate group. I think there is a
tension in the essentialism within the disability movement and disability
studies, and it is one that parallels difficulties experienced within other
identity politics: for example, problems for gay and lesbian and feminist
theory and politics. Todd Girlin suggests:
`For all the talk about the social construction of knowledge, identity
politics de facto seems to slide towards the premise that social groups
have essential identities' (Girlin, 1994, p.153].
This may be an example of the opposed priorities of theory and practice. As I
have suggested, theoretical sophistication may not be appropriate to the
needs of social movements:
`Post-structuralism's attack on essentialism and the "decentering of the
subject" came into conflict with thinking and practice rooted in the
standpoint of women or the experience of gays' (Calhoun, 1990, p.15).
In practice, social constructionism may not be as politically effective as
essentialism, due to a lack of rhetorical power. Some have asked why they
should deconstruct their own identities when the oppressors identities are still
so strong, and questioned what social constructionism can offer them:
`Social constructionism was an ambiguous ally in the attempt to oppose
the devaluing of various identities' (Calhoun, 1990, p.16).
There are also contradictions internal to the political strategies, for example
with the clash between the social model and the minority group notions of
disability. While they are often conflated, I would argue that there are
differences, and looking at the difference between British and international
disability politics indicates some of these. There are in fact two, contradictory
goals of disability politics: firstly, demolish the processes which disable;
second defend disabled people. Carol Vance (1989) suggests that the
lesbian and gay movement faces a parallel dilemma. Lesbian and gay
historians have attempted to trace a history of lesbian and gay people, while
social constructionist theorists have shown that there is no continuity, and
that same sex activity has different meanings in different times and places.
As historians begin to reconstruct the disability experience, I believe they will
face similar difficulties. It is only in the late twentieth century that gayness, or
disability, have been celebrated with pride.
Denise Riley has taken a similar approach to the history of the category
`woman', seemingly an essential identity, but in fact just as socially
constructed as sexuality. It is a problem for feminist politics which she
confronts, not just for historians: from a post-structuralist perspective, she
does not have much faith in the coherence of identities:
`The impermanence of collective identities in general is a pressing
problem for any emancipatory movement which launches itself on the
appeal to solidarity, to the common cause of a new group being, or an
ignored group identity' (Riley, 1988, p. 16).
Another example of the way these debates are relevant to disability is the
debate about the role of identity after the dissolution of disabling barriers. If
there are benefits to disability identity, if it is a source of strength and pride,
will it persist in the utopian world where there are not barriers or oppressive
processes? Is there a difference beyond oppression? Is there something
about having an impairment, as opposed to being disabled, which will persist
and will unite disabled people? There may be major differences here
between disability, and race/ gender/ sexuality.
Crude dichotomies between social constructionism and essentialism are
perhaps not particularly helpful, as Diana Fuss (1989) argues. Social
constructionism can itself be quite determinist and fixed. At other times, in the
rejection of biological thinking as essentialist, it can become idealist and
totally decentred. Judith Butler (1990) has explored the essentialism inherent
in social constructionist positions in gender, and the danger of reifying the
subject. While feminists have attacked Foucault for seemingly writing out the
possibilities of resistance, she develops a complex analysis which
nevertheless offers some benefits to those exploring identity politics. For her,
the subject is discursively constituted, but agency is possible. She describes
identities as self-representations, as "fictions" that are neither fixed not
stable. For example, in her view, gender centres on performativity, and she is
especially interested in the marginal and transgressive actors who create
themselves. Personally, I find Butler's work opaque and difficult, but I am
certain it could be useful in developing beyond some of the paradoxes of
disability identity (Sawicki, 1994, is a good starting point for these debates).
Let me now consider more closely this issue of difference. One of the
dangers of the essentialism highlighted above, is that it provides a simplistic
reductionism, an `us and them' approach. While this is comforting and
secure, it offers risks. As an example, I would suggest an article by disability
activist Alan Holdsworth, in which he developed a polemic about allies and
oppressors, dividing the non-disabled world into professional oppressors,
liberal oppressors and allies (Holdsworth, 1993). In my view, this was
unhelpful, because it reduced political agency and identity to a unilinear
choice. Disabled people, by virtue of having experienced disablement, were
good, and non-disabled people could only be counted as good in very
specific circumstances. Now, as I have tried to outline above, it is clear that
many people with impairment do not identify as disabled. Some have even
been viewed as traitors to the disability community, as selling out, as tokens.
For example, Bert Massie, director of RADAR, faces much opposition. So
clearly not all disabled people are allies.
However, my main problem with the analysis was that it ignored the multiple
identities and identity choices which people make in practice. For example,
there is a danger of ignoring the fact that disabled people are also men and
women, straight and gay, and come from various ethnic groups. Just as white
feminists were accused by black women of ignoring the specificities of black
women's experience, and even of being racist, so disabled people risk
ignoring difference. It may be that black disabled people sometimes have
more in common with black people than with disabled people. Sometimes the
values of the disability movement - for example, autonomy, independence,
choices and rights - may in fact be specifically white, western values.
Perhaps an eastern or Islamic approach would want to stress family, and
solidarity, and mutuality rather than what sometimes seems a very
individualistic model of liberation.
Class is a particularly powerful determinant of the disability experience. It
qualifies and changes the consequences of impairment, and reduces the
exposure to oppressive social relations. My class and gender are better
predictors of my career pattern and income than my impairment. Other
people with achondroplasia would experience their disablement very
differently, for example, if they had the educational opportunities which were
presented to me. Often in identity politics the issue of class is obscured: both
the women's movement and the gay movement have faced criticism for
being too middle-class dominated, too concerned with middle-class
experiences, not sufficiently attuned to the problems of poverty and
exclusion. While I am not arguing that this is necessarily true of the disability
movement as a whole, it is true of some in the disability movement.
Now, this is not to deny that disability is a very powerful identity, and one that
has the potential to transcend other identities. I think very often it is a
master/ mistress status. For example, it has the power to de-sex people, so
that people are viewed as disabled, not as men or women, straight or gay.
Also, I am aware that, for example, the disability movement is more open to
lesbian and gay disabled people than the lesbian and gay community is open
to disabled people (Shakespeare, forthcoming). But having said that, I still
think it is dangerous to overlook multiple identities, and to assume that
disability is the sole and significant identity.
For example, it may be necessary to move away from the unitary, essentialist
disability identity and think of a variety of disability identities. Just as feminists
suggested that being a black woman should not be conceived of additively,
but was qualitatively a different and separate thing, so it may be for black
disabled people. As Ossie Stuart suggests:
`The oppression that black disabled people endure is... unique... it is
necessary to construct a distinct and separate black disabled identity'
(Stuart, 1992, p. 94).
Thus he rejects the notion of double oppression, and instead talks of
simultaneous oppression, something qualitatively different. Mark Priestley's
excellent research with blind Asian people in Leeds has reinforced the need
for such developments (Priestley, 1995).
Post-structuralist approaches to identity have built on this notion of
difference, and the rejection of essentialism. They suggest we need a more
complex, more contingent and more subtle understanding of the workings of
power. Additionally, and vitally, we must be able to have `simultaneously an
account of radical historical contingency for all knowledge claims and
knowing subjects' and `a no-nonsense commitment to faithful accounts of a
"real" world' (Haraway, 1988, p.579). This tightrope act contextualises my
own commitment to disabled people's stories. It is for reasons such as these
that Disability Studies may find post-structuralist theory useful, although the
political demands of the disability movement may not allow space for
seemingly irrelevant diversions.
CONCLUSION
Currently, I am engaged in researching the things that disabled people say
about their sexual selves. In trying to construct a sexual politics of disability, I
am interested in disabled people's ideas of identity - in terms of masculinity or
femininity, being straight or gay (Shakespeare, forthcoming). I think that
identity politics is both about achieving a better deal for people, but also
about establishing the stories people tell about themselves, and having them
listened to. A theme of this paper has been the new narratives which
disability identity offers people with impairment, and an openness to the
varieties, variations and differences which are available. In this sense, the
theoretical complexities I have outlined have their correlation in the richness
of disabled people's own stories.
Ken Plummer's book draws on literary analysis which suggests there are only
five basic narratives to modern stories (Plummer, 1995, p.54). For example:
the journey (a progression through stages); enduring suffering; engaging in a
contest (a struggle with antagonists); pursuing consummation (achieving a
goal of fulfilment); establishing a home (for example, finding a community or
identity). I think these five patterns are evidenced in the identity narratives of
contemporary disabled people and influence the tales we tell about
ourselves. Furthermore, he suggests stories require audiences:
`Stories need communities to be heard, but communities themselves are also
built through story tellings. Stories gather people around them: they have to
attract audiences, and these audiences may then start to build a common
perception, a common language, a commonality' (Plummer, 1995, p.174).
This highlights the vital importance of community and movement to disability
identity, and the symbiotic relationship between individual and collective. The
process of political mobilisation, the process of cultural expression, and the
process of academic investigation and theorisation are equally vital to that
community. Fundamental is the process of listening, which requires
openness and respect.
Disability identity is about stories, having the space to tell them, and an
audience which will listen. It is also about recognising differences, and
isolating the significant attributes and experiences which constitute disability.
Some we might choose to change, others to recuperate or celebrate. We
may need to develop a nuanced attitude which incorporates ambivalence:
towards our bodies, for example. Theory has a part to play in this process.
But (metaphorically, if not physiologically), it all starts with having a voice. As
Foucault suggests, our task is to speak the truth about ourselves.
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