Jens Rydström
Professor emeritus
Disability, socialism and autonomy in the 1970s : case studies from Denmark, Sweden and the United Kingdom
Author
Summary, in English
In the 1970s, grassroots disability movements in many countries changed the thinking around disability and disability politics. Nonetheless, they were also part of larger political upheavals in the western world. How were they inspired by the socialist, feminist, and gay and lesbian movements? In addition, how did they relate to non-disabled allies? Organisations in Denmark and Sweden are investigated and compared to early disability-rights movements in the United Kingdom. Independently of each other, all groups developed materialist models, although only in Sweden and the United Kingdom did this lead to a linguistic distinction between ‘impairment’ and ‘disability’. Danish activists would rather use provocative language, while developing a social understanding of disability. They were also the only ones to discuss gender and sexuality. There are more similarities than differences between the movements, although the Danish specificities contributed to improvements in how Danes with disabilities can develop a positive sex life.
Department/s
- Department of Gender Studies
Publishing year
2019-05-08
Language
English
Pages
1637-1659
Publication/Series
Disability and Society
Volume
34
Issue
9-10
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Routledge
Topic
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Keywords
- 1970s
- Disability
- gender
- Scandinavia
- sexuality
- United Kingdom
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 0968-7599