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Mad at School: Rhetorics of Mental Disability and Academic Life
Title | Mad at School: Rhetorics of Mental Disability and Academic Life |
Writer | |
Date | 2025-05-06 22:39:24 |
Type | |
Link | Listen Read |
Desciption
"A very important study that will appeal to a disability studies audience as well as scholars in social movements, social justice, critical pedagogy, literacy education, professional development for disability and learning specialists in access centers and student counseling centers, as well as the broader domains of sociology and education."---Melanie Panitch, Ryerson University"Ableism is alive and well in higher education. We do not know how to abandon the myth of the 'pure (ivory) tower that props up and is propped up by ableist ideology.' . . . Mad at School is thoroughly researched and pathbreaking. . . . The author's presentation of her own experience with mental illness is woven throughout the text with candor and eloquence."---Linda Ware, State University of New York at GeneseoMad at School explores the contested boundaries between disability, illness, and mental illness in the setting of U.S. higher education. Much of the research and teaching within disability studies assumes a disabled body but a rational and energetic (an "agile") mind. In Mad at School, scholar and disabilities activist Margaret Price How might our education practices change if we understood disability to incorporate the disabled mind?Mental disability (more often called "mental illness") is a topic of fast-growing interest in all spheres of American culture, including popular, governmental, aesthetic, and academic. Mad at School is a close study of the ways that mental disabilities impact academic culture. Investigating spaces including classrooms, faculty meeting rooms, and job searches, Price challenges her readers to reconsider long-held values of academic life, including productivity, participation, security, and independence. Ultimately, she argues that academic discourse both produces and is produced by a tacitly privileged "able mind," and that U.S. higher education would benefit from practices that create a more accessible academic world.Mad at School is the first book to use a disability-studies perspective to focus on the ways that mental disabilities impact academic culture at institutions of higher education. Individual chapters examine the language used to denote mental disability; the role of "participation" and "presence" in student learning; the role of "collegiality" in faculty work; the controversy over "security" and free speech that has arisen in the wake of recent school shootings; and the marginalized status of independent scholars with mental disabilities.Margaret Price is Associate Professor of English at Spelman College.
Review
This book was incredibly important to me both as a graduate student and an instructor. It does a wonderful job of laying bare the ways that (often outdated) paradigms of looking at mental health/illness and ideas about cognitive function are entrenched in academic culture, to the detriment of not only individual students but also the academy and society as a whole. I think that those outside of academia might find the chapter about students who turned violent especially interesting and compelling--Price examines the news coverage of these students and the colleges' responses to the violence to show how the narrative of school shooters as quiet, loner freaks often functions to shift responsibility away from institutions that these individuals reached out to (with clear warning signs), but which ignored them.The book does have some jargon (it is an academic work, after all), but overall it was a fairly quick and definitely engaging read, and one that I would recommend to anyone who is or knows someone who is neuroatypical or who has dealt with mental health issues.