
Demonstrable Disability
Author(s) -
Katie Williams
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
early theatre
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2293-7609
pISSN - 1206-9078
DOI - 10.12745/et.22.2.3995
Subject(s) - rhetoric , scrutiny , negation , meaning (existential) , epithet , aesthetics , disability studies , sociology , psychology , gender studies , literature , linguistics , art , epistemology , law , political science , philosophy
This essay is about how disability rhetoric functions in early modern plays beyond the visible difference of disabled characters. In a medium that makes meaning out of bodies, disability rhetoric registers how much the language of disqualification can only succeed without the human form of the actor. Disability epithets define other bodies on the stage as whole and unmarked by negation, or, by contrast, have the effect of unsettling the scrutiny of the bodies that are onstage. Attention to disability rhetoric thus offers an instructive study because it succinctly outlines the concepts that ossify into, and serve to naturalize, negative images of early modern disability.