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Edward Albee’s Eugenic Theatrics: Disability Presence in Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?
Author(s) -
Ann M. Fox
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
disability studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2159-8371
pISSN - 1041-5718
DOI - 10.18061/dsq.v31i2.1594
Subject(s) - eugenics , oppression , drama , psychoanalysis , sociology , aesthetics , gender studies , environmental ethics , literature , psychology , philosophy , art , law , political science , politics
Edward Albee’s 1962 play Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? is a landmark American play for the challenges it presented to conventional theater, both thematically and dramaturgically.  In this essay, I argue that recognizing the disability presence in Albee’s play as embodied in the work’s references to eugenics is also important to a fuller understanding of the play’s revolutionary nature.  Through his references to pronatalism as well as genetic engineering and sterilization, Albee invokes the presence of those disabled bodies upon whose oppression the regulation of normalcy over the twentieth-century has rested.  In this way, we can come to see that disability does not simply metaphorize the gender oppression and middle-class complacency the play attacks, but is itself also recognized and historicized.  Reading Albee’s play in this way further suggests the importance of re-reading canonical drama through the lens of disability studies.

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