Dear Fabulous FEASTers,

Please forward this CFP to anyone who might contribute.  I have nothing to
do with it, just forwarding.

Best,
Sophia
¨°¨¨¨¨¨°º°¨¨¨¨¨°º°¨¨¨¨¨¨

*From:* Demeter Press [ mailto:[log in to unmask] <[log in to unmask]>]


 [image: demeter press logo]
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*CALL FOR PAPERS
*

*Demeter Press *is seeking submissions for an edited collection on

*
*

*DISABLED MOTHERS*
*

*
*

*Co-editors:* Gloria Filax and Dena Taylor

*Publication Date*: 2014



*DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS: DECEMBER 31, 2011!*

While there are several books on raising children with disabilities, the
literature is scant on experiences of disabled women who are raising
children OR the experiences of those parented by a woman with disabilities.
Bringing together disability with mothering has the potential to challenge
dominant narratives of both mothering AND disability. Noticing dominant
ideas, meanings, and/or stories/narratives (normative discourses) regarding
both 'mothering' and 'disability' expose the limits beyond which disabled
mothers live their daily lives.



The goal of this edited collection is to add to literatures on mothering and
disability through providing stories by disabled mothers or their children
as well as chapters of scholarly research and theorizing. We intend that
both stories and research in this collection will raise critical questions
about the social and cultural meanings of disability and mothering. Whether
a birth mother, an adoptive mother,a foster mother, a co-mother, someone
mothered by a disabled woman, or someone whose research explores disabled
mothering, we invite you to submit to this collection.

*Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:
*

How are disabled women discouraged from having children? How does the
medical model of disability shape the meanings assigned to disabled mothers?
How do chronic illnesses affect mothering? Are disabled mothers healthy
mothers? How do the social and cultural models of disability shape how we
understand disabled mothers and mothering? Are disabled mothers oppressed?
How doissues of race,class, and sexuality affect disabled mothers and their
families? Should disabled mothers 'pass' as normal? How are pregnancy and
birth experiences shaped by disability? How do children experience and
understand a disabled mother? What support is needed and received by
disabled mothers? How does the built environment, both public and private,
shape the experiences of disabled mothers? What kinds of issues are there
with children's schools, health professionals and/or children's attitudes?
What form, if any, does social and political activism take? Do legal
remedies work to assist disabled mothers (for example, disability as a
protected category in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms or the
Americans with Disabilities Act)? How does a mother's disability expose the
expectations of mothering? How does a mother's disability expose the
assumptions about disability? How is society disabling of mothering? How can
we 'do' disabled mothering differently?



*Submission Guidelines
*

Abstracts should be 250 words. Please also include a brief biography (50
words) with citizenship.

Please send to [log in to unmask] and [log in to unmask]

*Deadline for Abstracts is December 31, 2011
*

Accepted papers of 4000-5000 words (15-20 pages) will be due October 15,
2012

and should conform to MLA citation format.



*Tanya Titchkosky argues that referring to "disabled people" is preferable
because it emphasizes disablement as a social process that prevents certain
people from access to resources and goods available to others. "People with
disabilities" implies that disability is not part of what it is to be a
person and leaves disability as a problem. We agree with Titchkosky and
therefore our choice of the title for this collection is "Disabled Mothers".
(See Tanya Titchkosky (2003) Disability, Self, and Society. Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, chapter 2).