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Not Even Past

Episode 92: Disability History in the United States

Americans with disabilities compose approximately 50 million people today, and yet remains largely removed from the historical record. The road to recognition has been long and varied; from President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s use of a wheelchair while in office, to the popularity of “freak shows,” wherein physical ailments were put on display. How have organizations and activist groups groups dealt with stigma and asked for rights to be able to participate in the public sphere in the United States?

First year history graduate student John Carranza, specializing in disability history, sheds some light on historical representations of disability, and how modern understanding of disability is informed by the past.

Related posts:

Episode 30: Thomas Jefferson’s Qur’an Episode 73: The Borderlands War, 1915-20 Episode 77: The Paris Commune Default ThumbnailEpisode 97: The Zionist Movement in Czechoslovakia

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