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Exercise, rehabilitation and posthuman disability studies: Four responses

Monforte, Javier; Gibson, Barbara E.; Smith, Brett; Goodley, Dan

Authors

Javier Monforte

Barbara E. Gibson

Dan Goodley



Abstract

This chapter takes a detour from sport in the strict sense of the term. Instead, it focuses on exercise-based rehabilitation. In conventional rehabilitation, exercise is a means by which disabled people can return to their “normal” lives and recover their independence. This convention arises from an understanding of disabled people as flawed humans that need repair to become proper humans. Moving on from such an ableist understanding will lead us to conceive and do rehabilitation differently. In the same way, changing how rehabilitation is performed and assigning exercise other roles will transform our notions of disability. One way of making these theoretical and practical shifts thinkable is to engage with posthuman disability studies. Yet, this approach to thinking can seem too dense and abstract to be useful. In this chapter, we provide an accessible and practical introduction to posthuman disability studies, so that those who have not studied it can connect with the ideas productively and put them into work.

Citation

Monforte, J., Gibson, B. E., Smith, B., & Goodley, D. (2023). Exercise, rehabilitation and posthuman disability studies: Four responses. In Researching Disability Sport: Theory, Method, Practice (171-184). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003153696

Online Publication Date Dec 12, 2022
Publication Date Mar 23, 2023
Deposit Date Feb 23, 2025
Publisher Routledge
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Pages 171-184
Book Title Researching Disability Sport: Theory, Method, Practice
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003153696
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/3543890