Literature DB >> 15877195

Mothers and models of disability.

Gail Landsman1.   

Abstract

Based on a qualitative anthropological study of American mothers of infants and young children newly diagnosed with disability, this essay examines how mothers understand their children and define disability in relation to publicly available discourses of disability and identity. In seeking to improve their children's opportunities in mainstream society, mothers appear to comply with the medical model. But over time and in the process of providing meaning to their experience, mothers retool models, drawing both on the social and minority group models' rejection of a problem-based definition of disability as inherently caused by impairment and on their own intimate engagement with impairment as an embodied experience.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15877195     DOI: 10.1007/s10912-005-2914-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Humanit        ISSN: 1041-3545


  6 in total

1.  Narrating disability, narrating religious practice: reconciliation and fragile X syndrome.

Authors:  Marsha Michie; Debra Skinner
Journal:  Intellect Dev Disabil       Date:  2010-04

2.  Negotiating desires and options: how mothers who carry the fragile X gene experience reproductive decisions.

Authors:  Kelly Amanda Raspberry; Debra Skinner
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2011-02-03       Impact factor: 4.634

3.  Prenatal diagnosis and termination of pregnancy: perspectives of South African parents of children with Down syndrome.

Authors:  Chantelle Jennifer Scott; Merle Futter; Ambroise Wonkam
Journal:  J Community Genet       Date:  2012-10-25

4.  A place for genetic uncertainty: parents valuing an unknown in the meaning of disease.

Authors:  Ian Whitmarsh; Arlene M Davis; Debra Skinner; Donald B Bailey
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2007-06-11       Impact factor: 4.634

5.  "And I look down and he is gone": narrating autism, elopement and wandering in Los Angeles.

Authors:  Olga Solomon; Mary C Lawlor
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2013-07-05       Impact factor: 4.634

6.  Parenting children with Down syndrome: Societal influences.

Authors:  Lourdes Huiracocha; Carlos Almeida; Karina Huiracocha; Jorge Arteaga; Andrea Arteaga; Stuart Blume
Journal:  J Child Health Care       Date:  2017-08-28       Impact factor: 1.979

  6 in total

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