我们真的在与残疾歧视作斗争吗?一个复杂社会的离题。

IF 2.2 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Frontiers in Sociology Pub Date : 2025-07-30 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsoc.2025.1575778
Lucas Teles da Silva, Dimitri Marques Abramov, Daniel de Freitas Quintanilha
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引用次数: 0

摘要

残疾歧视作为一种普遍存在但往往不容质疑的压迫结构,在多个社会领域发挥作用,塑造了对残疾和正常的看法。本文通过一个跨学科的框架来探讨残疾歧视的复杂性,该框架整合了复杂性理论、酷儿理论和批判性残疾研究,并结合了米歇尔·福柯和乔治·坎圭朗(以及其他人)的作品。该研究没有将残疾歧视视为一种单一形式的歧视,而是考察了它与其他压迫性制度的交集,包括同性恋恐惧症、医疗化和认知不公。通过分析失明、精神分裂症和截瘫是如何被社会建构和规范的,本研究强调了在新自由主义社会中,生物政治和死亡政治机制如何决定哪些身体被认为是有价值的、有生产力的或可消耗的。这一框架使我们能够更深入地了解残疾是如何作为一种控制手段和一种决定因素发挥作用的,在这种情况下,生命被认为不值得关心。此外,通过运用复杂性理论,本文挑战了将残疾视为个体缺陷而非人类多样性组成部分的还原论观点。这一分析的含义超出了理论论述的范围,它呼吁对多样性进行重新概念化,这不仅仅是在现有结构中容纳残疾人,而是积极地解构残疾主义的认识论和制度基础。这项研究通过促进关于残疾歧视如何在社会叙事、政策和日常互动中再现的批判性对话,为心理学和文化研究做出了贡献。通过将残疾重新定义为认知和存在的丰富场所,而不仅仅是损害,本文试图促进对人类多样性的更包容的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Are we truly fighting ableism? Digressions for a complex society.

Ableism, as a pervasive yet often unchallenged structure of oppression, operates across multiple social domains, shaping perceptions of disability and normalcy. This article interrogates the complexities of ableism through an interdisciplinary framework that integrates complexity theory, Queer theory, and critical disability studies, engaging with the works of Michel Foucault and Georges Canguilhem (among others). Rather than treating ableism as a singular form of discrimination, the study examines its intersections with other oppressive systems, including homophobia, medicalization, and epistemic injustice. By analyzing how blindness, schizophrenia, and paraplegia are socially constructed and regulated, this research highlights how biopolitical and necropolitical mechanisms determine which bodies are deemed valuable, productive, or expendable within neoliberal societies. This framework allows for a deeper understanding of how ableism functions both as a means of control and as a determinant of which lives are considered unworthy of care. Furthermore, by engaging with complexity theory, the article challenges reductionist perspectives that frame disability as an individual deficit rather than as an integral part of human diversity. The implications of this analysis extend beyond theoretical discourse, calling for a reconceptualization of diversity that does not merely accommodate disabled individuals within existing structures but actively deconstructs the epistemological and institutional foundations of ableism. This research contributes to psychological and cultural studies by fostering a critical dialogue on how ableism is reproduced in societal narratives, policies, and everyday interactions. By reframing disability as a site of epistemic and existential richness rather than mere impairment, this article tries to advance a more inclusive understanding of human diversity.

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来源期刊
Frontiers in Sociology
Frontiers in Sociology Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
4.00%
发文量
198
审稿时长
14 weeks
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