| Course Description | This course surveys Latin American literary texts that have deeply engaged with disability in the20 th and 21 st century. Against the tendency to treat disability merely as a useful metaphor or to
 simply import Global Northern vocabulary and methodologies of disability studies to other
 locations, this course turns to Latin American literary texts by authors that have been directly
 “touched” by disability to foreground the concerns, vocabularies, and commitments that their
 texts reveal. This includes authors who either through their personal experience with disability
 or as caretakers—as parents, siblings, or close friends of people with disabilities—have closely
 grappled with the experience of non-normative bodies and minds in the Latin American
 context. In this course we ask how are subjects with disabilities represented in a variety of
 genres (novel, essay, poem, graphic novel) and what constraints and possibilities circumscribe
 these subjectivities and their lives. Ultimately, we will ask what vision of disability justice
 emerges from these localized experiences and creative interventions beyond now globalized
 disability discourses of inclusion/access and independence/autonomy.
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