The Comparative Sociology Of Disabled Masculinities: A Bourdieusian Analysis Of Autobiographies By Men With Spinal Cord Injuries and Autism Spectrum Conditions
Abstract
Sociological examinations of the intersection between
disability and masculinity remain underdeveloped. While
insightful analyses have considered the mechanisms through which
impairments may interrupt socially valued performances of
masculinity, a number of key limitations persist. Extant work
within the field has not considered in sufficient depth and
complexity: the comparative diversity of the gender/disability
intersection; the role(s) of affective embodiment; and the
generative interaction between distinct impairment forms and
strategic enactments of masculinity. Employing forty published
autobiographies from men with Spinal Cord Injuries and Autism
Spectrum Conditions, this thesis uses Bourdieusian social theory
to conceptualise the dynamic interaction between corporeality and
overlapping experiences of privilege/exclusion. Spinal Cord
Injuries are conceived of as radically disrupting possessed and
anticipated gendered resources, alongside a relative stability of
culturally normative, internalised prisms of masculine
self-evaluation. Yet, narrators within this group negotiated the
encompassing social environment with a knowing, gendered
fluidity, through narrative practices of rugged heroism, the
privileging of the cerebral, and participation within
masculinising interdependencies. Autism Spectrum Conditions were,
similarly, conceptualised as involving limited access to valued
gendered resources; yet, a phenomenologically disjunctured
embodiment of taken-for-granted meaning appeared to interrupt
dialectics between internalised and externalised modes of
self-evaluation. This group’s “alien” habitus could
motivate scholastic forms of learning designed to develop
“social skills”, often fostering gendered practices that were
recognisably “masculine”, but lacking in
interpersonal/cultural fluidity. The thesis concludes with a
comparative examination of the two groups under consideration,
contending that, alongside significant points of resonance, their
experiences were tremendously distinctive in terms of gendered
embodiment, temporality, the habitus, social/biomedical
interventions, and the “feel for the game”.
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