
Telling Ourselves Sideways, Crooked and Crip: An Introduction
Author(s) -
Joshua St. Pierre,
Danielle Peers
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
canadian journal of disability studies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1929-9192
DOI - 10.15353/cjds.v5i3.293
Subject(s) - narrative , normative , aesthetics , point (geometry) , piano , sociology , literature , history , art , philosophy , epistemology , art history , geometry , mathematics
Stories about us are boring. As predictable and ubiquitous as they are dangerous, normate narrations of our lives are as straight as they come: one-dimensional narratives of tragic loss and/or progressive normativity. We are dying or overcoming. We become a burden or an inspiration. We desire vindication or marriage. Our entire narrative worlds are defined by our Otherness, yet revolve around the normates and the normative. These stories cut straight to the point, using—and used as—well-steeped, easily readable metaphors bolstered by the requisite piano-based musical cues. If we didn’t know us better, we would bore us.