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On the Negative Possibility of Suffering: Adorno, Feminist Philosophy, and the Transfigured Crip To Come
Author(s) -
Kelly Fritsch
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
disability studies quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2159-8371
pISSN - 1041-5718
DOI - 10.18061/dsq.v33i4.3869
Subject(s) - dialectic , capitalism , relation (database) , philosophy , modernity , state (computer science) , aesthetics , critical theory , epistemology , disability studies , sociology , psychoanalysis , psychology , gender studies , law , politics , algorithm , database , political science , computer science
Critical theorist Theodor Adorno is rarely considered as a philosopher of the body. The body which leaks, desires, rages, and lusts is seemingly disjointed from the dry and dense writings that often characterize Adorno's work. As bleak as this description of Adorno’s writings may be, however, the body is both central to his critique of modernity and the site of hope and desire against the total domination and suffering that capitalism imposes. This paper highlights some of the ways in which feminist philosophy of disability and disability studies, more generally, would benefit by thinking in constellation with Adorno's negative dialectic to interrogate the ways in which meanings get made about bodies and, furthermore, use the margins of difference, in relation with others, to challenge what Adorno calls the "wrong state of things." I argue that the transfigured crip to come is central to this fight against the "wrong state of things." Keywords: Adorno; negative dialectics; suffering; disability; crip

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