Graduation Semester and Year
2021
Language
English
Document Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy in English
Department
English
First Advisor
Penelope Ingram
Abstract
Most scholarship on the topic of disability and motherhood tends to be of an empirical nature common to social, education, and psychology studies (Landsman 2008; Wilson and Cellio 2011, Filax and Taylor 2014). Despite the appearance of movies, novels and especially memoirs that deal with the subject, disability as it engages with motherhood has received scarce attention by feminist, motherhood, and disability scholarship (Prilleltensky 2004; Landsman 2008). Existing literature indicates a gap in studying the joint representation of mothers and disability. This study aims to address this gap by analysis of a selection of post-1980 American movies. Concentrating on the relation between mother and child as “interactional performance" (Walsh 28), I examine the movies' treatment of mothers' mediation of disability while they raise and socialize children to meet societal expectations. Grounded in a feminist disability framework, this research argues that disability enhances, rearticulates, troubles, and undermines dominant concepts of mother/hood as an ideology, experience, and subjectivity. Moreover, it proposes a theorization of crip mothering as a form of mothering informed by disability as difference and an alternative way of being. Scholarly literature concurs that popular cultural images have an ideological force in formulating public conceptual perceptions of the world (Kaplan 1992; Hall 1997; Haller 2010). Susan Bordo, deploying Foucault, contends that popular culture causes the internalization of an intense self-surveillance that sustains the efficacy of cultural and societal proscriptions. The enduring stereotypical representations of disability and motherhood marginalize and disempower mothers as well as people with disabilities. Despite their ubiquitous presence in films, they are always assigned subordinate roles (Kaplan 1992; Garland-Thomson 1997). Both are measured against a predominant norm that precludes their participation in social and economic life. Therefore, mothers and people with disabilities serve as backgrounds against which able-bodied and masculine bodies assert their subject positions.
Keywords
Disability, Motherhood, Representation
Disciplines
Arts and Humanities | English Language and Literature
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Sumili, Mohammed Ali H., "Crip Mothering: Representation of Disability and Motherhood in Post-1980 American Films" (2021). English Dissertations. 94.
https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/english_dissertations/94
Comments
Degree granted by The University of Texas at Arlington