Scan barcode
Reviews tagging 'Cancer'
Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement by Ashley Shew
8 reviews
crushedredpepper's review
5.0
Graphic: Chronic illness, Ableism, and Medical trauma
Moderate: Cancer and Mental illness
Minor: Pandemic/Epidemic and Forced institutionalization
profzr's review
4.75
Graphic: Ableism
Moderate: Cancer and Chronic illness
Minor: Forced institutionalization, Suicide, Mental illness, Medical trauma, and Sexual assault
jobaji's review
5.0
5/5 stars
Graphic: Ableism, Chronic illness, Forced institutionalization, Cancer, and Medical content
30something_reads's review against another edition
4.5
I think, regardless of your familiarity with ableism and how it presents historically and in current society, this is still an accessible reminder that we all still carry unintended biases around disability.
I read this via audio- which I highly recommend if you enjoy audiobooks.
For me, the chapter around Neurodiversity really hit hard, but it was all very informative.
Graphic: Ableism
Minor: Cancer, Forced institutionalization, Pandemic/Epidemic, Chronic illness, Physical abuse, Medical trauma, and Mental illness
stindex's review
3.25
Graphic: Ableism
Moderate: Medical content, Cancer, and Chronic illness
carriepond's review
4.75
Shew discusses how technology has and can be used to help people with disabilities and the limits of technology— lack of access (prohibitive costs, only available to or capable of helping a small subset of the disabled community it is supposedly for), design flaws (especially when tech is created by non-disabled people to “solve” the “problem” of disability rather than created in conversation with people with lived experience about what tools or tech would make their lives easier), the weaponization of technology against disabled folks, and the unhelpful narratives and stereotypes frequently reinforced in discussions of disability tech.
Against Technoableism is so much more than a discussion about technology, though. It challenges readers to examine the ways we think and talk about disability, discusses the history of disability as a concept and the historical treatment of people with disabilities, and introduces readers to a wealth of concepts in the disability rights space.
Some of the information between essays is repeated, because as Shew explains in the introduction, she wanted the essays to be able to be read in any order or as standalones from the others, but I think the information is valuable enough that it bears repeating and rereading anyway.
I learned a lot reading this book, despite how short and “easy” it was to read. Highly recommend reading it.
Graphic: Ableism, Medical trauma, Genocide, and Forced institutionalization
Moderate: Cancer, Chronic illness, and Pandemic/Epidemic
Minor: Slavery
sleeping_roses's review
4.5
Moderate: Ableism
Minor: Cancer, Genocide, Medical trauma, and Forced institutionalization
nautilus18's review
4.5
Moderate: Chronic illness, Ableism, and Cancer
Minor: Genocide and Forced institutionalization