战争和护理中的残疾研究:如何开展其他工作?人类学与残疾研究学者就俄罗斯入侵乌克兰问题进行的对话

Hanna Zaremba-Kosovych, Volha Verbilovich, Sarah D. Phillips, Julie Hemment
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章汇集了四位女权主义残疾研究学者和人类学家的心声,俄罗斯的侵略战争对她们的工作产生了深远的影响。这篇文章是通过一次对话式的接触而创作的,它基于马萨诸塞大学阿默斯特分校就战争与关爱中的残疾研究这一主题所做的小组发言。我们聚集在一起,分享见解,思考实践横向团结的最佳方式,我们的方法受到了女权主义认识论和方法论以及护理和残疾研究方面最新研究成果的启发。本文采用对话形式,介绍了我们的思考以及影响我们知识生产的背景,并分享了我们的 "残疾-女性 "对话过程。在与激发女权主义、人类学、斯拉夫研究以及批判性残疾学术研究的非殖民化讨论进行对话的过程中,该书以与残疾人组织(OPD)"为权利而战"(Fight For Right)相关的乌克兰学者-活动家的工作为中心。在突出他们工作的同时,该书追溯了他们调动数据的创造性方式,以及他们利用数据的实验性和协作性实践。最后,它提出了一些问题,如我们可以建立跨地方的团结,以及我们可以建立新颖的、"其他 "的合作方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disability studies in war and care: How to do work otherwise? A conversation between anthropology-and-disability-studies scholars in relation to Russia's invasion of Ukraine

This piece weaves together the voices of four feminist disability studies scholars and anthropologists whose work has been profoundly shaped by Russia's war of aggression. Composed via a dialogic encounter, it is based on a panel presentation on the topic of disability studies in war and care that took place at the University of Massachusetts Amherst just before the 1-year mark of the full-scale invasion. We came together to share insights and consider the best ways to practice horizontal solidarity, our approach inspired by recent work on feminist epistemology and methodology and scholarship on care, and disability studies. The text assumes a dialogic form, presenting our reflections as well as the contexts that shape our knowledge production and sharing the process of scaffolding our “Dis-Fem” conversation. In dialogue with the decolonizing discussions that animate feminist, anthropological, and Slavic Studies, as well as critical disability scholarship, it centers on the work of Ukrainian scholar-activists associated with the organization of people with disabilities (OPD) Fight For Right. In foregrounding their work, it traces the creative ways they've mobilized data and the experimental and collaborative data practices they've harnessed. Finally, it asks questions about trans-local solidarities we can enact and ways we might forge novel, “otherwise” ways to collaborate.

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