Originally Posted by
OrphanPip
I much it much in the way of identity politics, as associated with First Wave and Second Wave feminist. I think feminist and racial movements gain a lot of strength by their ability to reificate (to borrow a marxist term) abstract concepts like womanhood into an easily identifiable concept of Woman, although never a complete or universal one. It's easier to get people to understand women's rights issues because it is easier to generalize the plight of the "average" woman.
I think when we get into larger and more diverse groups, like disabled people, the first barrier is going to be to make people understand the nature of each individual's disability. I can't help but think of a range of morphing possibilities when I hear a person described as "disabled", from neurological disorders to amputees.
I'm wondering if there might not be a kinship of ideas between transgendered/gender queer movements and disability rights. Groups that often are fighting against definition. Gender queers and transgendered don't really want to be viewed as different, they more want to be accepted into the sphere of "normalcy." I'm not familiar enough with disability movements to say, but I get a sense that a lot of individuals (particularly with regard to mental health) are fighting not be regarded as different but as simply another part of the normal range of human existence.