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Analysis Of Tiny Tims, Supercrips And The End Of No Pity

Decent Essays

In the chapter “Tiny Tims, Supercrips, and the End of Pity” of No Pity, Shapiro focuses on the stereotypes disabled people endure throughout their lifetime, a result of the systematic oppression of disabled and neurodivergent people. Similarly to race, gender, and sexual orientation, disabilities are a social construction (Wendell, 2) created by able-bodied, neurotypical people to uphold power. A goal of the Navigating Boston course is to acknowledge that disabilities exist in this society, and to recognize the needs of the disabled. Ultimately, this class aspires to help create a universally accessible world, which would require dismantling the structures that sustain ableism, such as ableist legislation, inaccessible infrastructure, unequal opportunity of employment and unequal pay, the healthcare system which favors …show more content…

On the surface, this may seem like a progressive step of destigmatizing the disabled, but it is crucial to pay attention to the intentions. Are the use of disabled people really progressive, if the companies and corporations including these people are not entirely universally accessible for both customers and employees? For every dollar that advertisement brings into the company, how much of it will be going to disabled employees? Or are these people only a means of bringing in sales? Ultimately, as Shapiro emphasized throughout the reading, the stereotypes that exist around the disabled population is that main perpetrator to inequity. The infantilization leads to “the paternalistic assumption that disabled people are not entitled to make their own decisions and lead the lives they chose.” Destroying the stereotypes that disabled people are incapable of living a successful, meaningful life without being the means of pity of inspiration will lead to the destruction of the systematic oppression disabled

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