As I say, this outlook can manifest itself as optimism (the future is
one of unbounded possibility, etc.) not always distinct from wishful
thinking or denial. And it’s just as likely to pour out in resentment
that is keen, if not particularly consistent. “I am a victim,” the logic
goes, “of all those people out there playing victim.” Absent a
frontier, the frontier spirit starts wallowing in self-pity.
The absence of pity of any sort from Kim E. Nielsen’s new book
A Disability History of the United States, published by
Beacon Press,
is hardly the most provocative thing about it. Nielsen, a professor of
disability studies at the University of Toledo, indicates that it is the
first book “to create a wide-ranging chronological American history
narrative told through the lives of people with disabilities.” By
displacing the able-bodied, self-subsisting individual citizen as the
basic unit (and implied beneficiary) of the American experience, she
compels the reader to reconsider how we understand personal dignity,
public life, and the common good.
Take the “ugly laws,” for instance. During the late
19th and early 20th centuries, major American cities made it illegal for
(in the words of the San Francisco ordinance from 1867) “any person who
is diseased, maimed, mutilated, or in any way deformed so as to be an
unsightly or disgusting object” to appear in “streets, highways,
thoroughfares, or public places.”
The laws were unequally enforced, with poor and indigent people with
handicaps being the main targets. For one thing, the impact of the Civil
War plus the incredible frequency of industrial accidents meant there
were more unsightly beggars than ever. But while deformed and damaged
bodies were being cleared from the streets, there was a pronounced
public appetite for the exhibits at “freak” shows.
Now, the two phenomena in question have been studied in some depth over the years. A
monograph
on the ugly laws appeared not that long ago -- and while there have
been more detailed studies of the world of “human oddities” than the
late Leslie Fiedler’s cultural history
Freaks: Myths and Images of the Secret Self (1978),
I doubt many have been nearly as thought-provoking. Nielsen’s
historical narrative is presumably meant for undergraduates and the
general public, so it’s natural to lose nuance in the treatment of
either topic. But the breadth of the survey also means there is a gain
in perspective.
No direct link exists between the policing of disabled bodies and
their exploitation as entertainment, yet there is a connection even so.
“In contestations over who was fit to be present in the civic world and
who was not,” Nielsen says, “people with disabilities often found
themselves increasingly regulated. Those not considered fit for public
life were variably shut away, gawked at, [or] exoticized.”
It was a far cry from the norm of a century earlier. “The general
lack of discussion and institutional acknowledgement of physical
disabilities” in 17th- and 18th-century America “suggests that they
simply were not noteworthy among communities of European colonists in
the period before the Revolution,” Nielsen writes. “Indeed, it suggests
that such bodily variations were relatively routine and expected – and
accommodations were made, or simply didn’t have to be made, to integrate
individuals into community labor patterns.”
Over time, in other words,
disability became abnormal.
Or at least it quit seeming “normal” in the way that it once did: a
hard fact of life, to be sure, but just in the nature of things.
Consider the way severely wounded veterans of the Revolutionary War
reintegrated into the life of the new Republic. Citing recent historical
work, Nielsen indicates that they “labored, married, had children, and
had households typical in size and structures, at rates nearly identical
to their nondisabled counterparts." They “worked at the same types of
jobs, in roughly the same proportions” as well, and as a group they
experienced poverty at the same rates as others of their background. The
wounded returning from later wars had a much harder time of it.
Not all handicaps are created equal, of course. Nor is it
self-evident that they should be lumped together (war wounds and birth
defects, blindness and retardation, mental illness and dwarfism) under
the common heading of “disability.” Nielsen sketches the changing ways
political and medical authorities responded to the afflicted -- by
trying to help them, or hide them, or both. In any case, the trend was
to define them not by what they could do, but by their handicap. At the
same time, attitudes towards the disabled were becoming tangled together
with other prejudices. If certain people weren’t allowed to vote or
otherwise exercise much power, it was only because their race, gender,
or foreign origin left them physically or mentally unfit for it. Stigma
and inequality fed off one another.
The very idea of being profoundly, inescapably limited in some way
makes for anxiety when the cultural norm is the expectation “to create
successful and powerful selves” that are ready to “stand on our own two
feet” and “speak for ourselves.” Nielsen points out that the last two
figures of speech are part of the problem. There are people who
literally can’t “stand on their own two feet” or “speak for themselves.”
While my exposure to the kinds of disability activists Nielsen writes
about in the final pages of her history has been limited, they do seem
to have an
ironic and sarcastic
(rather than po-facedly indignant) response to such "able-ist" imagery
-- regarding it less as an insult than as evidence that the speaker is a
bit thick. Which is usually true. The "unchallenged," as we might be
called euphemistically, tend to be somewhat lacking in imagination and
insight about their struggle for greater equality and autonomy.
And yet they have won some battles –
by demanding help. By
demanding a redistribution of resources on the basis of their intrinsic
right, as human beings, to the dignity they could not enjoy otherwise.
Someone in a wheelchair can zip around the neighborhood just fine,
getting to her job at the pharmacy on time, provided the curbs are made
accessible. And no, the person in the wheelchair is not responsible for
paying for that, any more than her customers are responsible for mixing
their own medications. Interdependence is not a failure of independence;
it is the condition for enjoying the sort of independence that means
anything at all.