DiscoverOf Prurient InterestEpisode 8: Representations of Disability in Fairy Tales & Beyond with Host of "Crip & Chronic", Joel Lago
Episode 8: Representations of Disability in Fairy Tales & Beyond with Host of "Crip & Chronic", Joel Lago

Episode 8: Representations of Disability in Fairy Tales & Beyond with Host of "Crip & Chronic", Joel Lago

Update: 2021-06-06
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In this episode, my guest Joel, of the podcast Crip & Chronic, and I discuss Amanda LeDuc's Disfigured: On Fairy Tales, Disability, and Making Space (2020) and how it pertains to the subject of the last couple of episodes, Angela Carter's The Bloody Chamber. This conversation centers around how representations of disability in popular media, including fairy tales, have a serious influence on the way we conceptualize disability in society at large. We also veer off into arguments about whether Chris Evans is better than Chris Hemsworth... I fell in favor of the latter. What can I say? I have a weak spot for himbos. 




Books Referenced: 


Dune by Frank Herbert


Brave New World by Aldous Huxley


Feminist, Queer, Crip by Alison Kafer


Slow Man by J. M. Coetzee


The Ship Who Sang by Anne McCaffery


Growing Up Disabled in Australia




Films Referenced:


Pulse (Australian film)


Captain America


Friday the 13th, Pt. 2


Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge




Other References:


Amanda LeDuc's website


"The Stories We Tell About Disability: A Conversation with Amanda LeDuc" by Sara Black McCulloch

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Episode 8: Representations of Disability in Fairy Tales & Beyond with Host of "Crip & Chronic", Joel Lago

Episode 8: Representations of Disability in Fairy Tales & Beyond with Host of "Crip & Chronic", Joel Lago

Kaelyn Davis