Baldys, Emily, M., Disabled Sexuality, Incorporated: The Compulsions of Popular Romance | 125 |
Burke, Lucy, Genetics at the Scene of the Crime: DeCODING Tainted Blood | 193 |
Cheyne, Ria, Introduction: Popular Genres and Disability Representation | 117 |
Cowley, Danielle, Life Writing, Resistance, and the Politics of Representation: A Critical Discourse Analysis of Eli Clare’s “Learning to Speak” | 85 |
Eyre, Pauline, Deafened by Laughter: Reading David Lodge’s Deaf Sentence as a Carnivalesque Dismodernist Text | 17 |
Haigh, Samantha, Personal or Political? Representations of Disability in Contemporary French Fiction | 307 |
Hall, Alice, Autre-biography: Disability and Life Writing in Coetzee’s Later Works | 53 |
Hughes, Chloë, Seeing Blindness in Children’s Picturebooks | 35 |
Imbracsio, Nicola M., Stage Hands: Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus and the Agency of the Disabled Body in Text and Performance | 291 |
Irwin, Catherine, Phantasmatic Reconstructions: Visualizing Phantom Limbs in the Works of Alexa Wright and Frank Bidart | 69 |
Jarman, Michelle, Disability on Trial: Complex Realities Staged for Courtroom Drama—The Case of Jodi Picoult | 209 |
Kanyusik, Will, The Problem of Recognition: The Disabled Male Veteran and Masculinity as Spectacle in William Wyler’s The Best Years of Our Lives | 159 |
Karah, Hemachandran, Blindness, Lockean Empiricism, and the Continent of Britain: An Examination of the Identities of Mr Spectator and Theseus in the Writings of Ved Mehta | 259 |
Miller, Kathleen, A., The Mysteries of the In-Between: Re-reading Disability in E. Nesbit’s Late Victorian Gothic Fiction | 143 |
Mintz, Susannah B., The Art of Joseph Grigely: Deafness, Conversation, Noise | 1 |
Murray, Stuart, From Virginia’s Sister to Friday’s Silence: Presence, Metaphor, and the Persistence of Disability in Contemporary Writing | 241 |
Passanante Elman, Julie, “Nothing Feels as Real”: Teen Sick-Lit, Sadness, and the Condition of Adolescence | 175 |
Schwab, Sandra, “It Is Only with One’s Heart That One Can See Clearly”: The Loss of Sight in Teresa Medeiros’s The Bride and the Beast and Yours until Dawn | 275 |