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Displacing Marginalized Bodies: How Human Rights Discourses Function in the Law and in Communities
Authors:Katrina?M.?Powell  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:kmpowell@vt.edu"   title="  kmpowell@vt.edu"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author,Jenny?Dick-Mosher,Anisa?Zvonkovic,Pamela?B.?Teaster
Affiliation:1.Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University,Blacksburg,USA
Abstract:In this article, we examine disability and eugenics discourses and the ways they function in spaces where vulnerable persons have been historically excluded by the state and blamed for their own “immiseration.” We ask how queer theories of repudiation, abjection, and vulnerability lend insight into the ways that people with intellectual disabilities are discursively located outside normative discourses of home, care, and quality of life, and whether these discourses shifted to serve this vulnerable population when historically the very places in question repudiated them, infringed on their human rights, and questioned their sexuality. To address these questions, we focus on the recent and impending closures of Virginia’s Training Centers, residential institutions for persons with intellectual disabilities now scheduled for staggered closures before 2020.
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