Citations:neuroqueer

English citations of neuroqueer

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  • 2015 May 4, Nick Walker, “Neuroqueer: An Introduction, by Nick Walker”, quoted in 2018, Jason Daniel Tougaw, The Elusive Brain: Literary Experiments in the Age of Neuroscience, Yale University Press (→ISBN), page 261
  • 2016, Zachary A. Richter, "Melting Down the Family Unit: A Neuroqueer Critique of Table-Readiness", in Disabling Domesticity (ed. Michael Rembis)
  • 2018, Michael S. Jeffress, International Perspectives on Teaching with Disability: Overcoming Obstacles and Enriching Lives, Routledge (→ISBN):
    We are neurodivergent and neuroqueer everything around us. According to Nick Walker (2015), neuroqueer means, among other things, to be actively 
  • 2018, Julia M Rodas, Autistic Disturbances: Theorizing Autism Poetics from the DSM to Robinson Crusoe, University of Michigan Press (→ISBN)
    Among these terms, “neuroqueer” figures prominently. Adopted from an established community of autistic writers and thinkers, including Ibby Grace and Melanie Yergeau, neuroqueer gestures toward a cultural history shared by neurodivergent and queer peoples and speaks to overlaps of identity and experiences of (resistance to) forced compliance.
  • 2018, Heather Stone Wodis, Girls With Autism Becoming Women, page 52:
    The personal narrative presented by Dawn perhaps comes closest to neuroqueer-situated theory because of the way she probes social norms, like compulsory heterosexuality and compulsory able-bodiedness (Garland-Thomson 2005).
  • 2018, M. Remi Yergeau, Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness, page 123:
    Whether discussed in clinical journals or in media accounts, ABA purports to change neural pathways, rewire neuroqueer brains, and ford synapses.
  • 2019, Justine E. Enger, "'The Disability Rights Community Was Never Mine': Neuroqueer Disidentification", Gender & Society, Volume 33, Issue 1, February 2019, page 124:
    Neuroqueer perspectives challenge typical understandings of identity categories through disidentification processes. A neuroqueer project not only questions typical conceptions of gender but also pivots away from normative gender categories altogether.
  • 2020, Donnie TC Denome, "Autism Speaks' rebranding co-opts neurodiversity", The Student Life (Claremont Colleges), 21 February 2020, page 6:
    I'm a human, too: autistic, neuroweird, neuroqueer, disabled, brain damaged and all.
  • 2020, Austin Gerhard Oswald, Shéár Avory, & Michelle Fine, "Intersectional expansiveness borne at the neuroqueer nexus", Psychology & Sexuality:
    We try to attend with empathy and dignity to the struggles, freedom dreams, and aspirations of neuroqueer youth living in an unfree world.
  • 2020, David Ben Shannon, "Neuroqueer(ing) Noise: Beyond ‘Mere Inclusion’ in a Neurodiverse Early Childhood Classroom", Canadian Journal of Disability Studies, Volume 9, Number 5 (2020), page 492:
    In a British education context, ‘inclusion’ usually refers to the physical integration of neuroqueer children into a mainstream school.
  • 2021, Sarah Cavar & Alexandre Baril, "Blogging to Counter Epistemic Injustice: Trans disabled digital micro-resistance", Disability Studies Quarterly, Volume 41, Number 2, Spring 2021:
    Neuroqueer bloggers comprise a significant share of these communities, oftentimes creating genders and pronouns specific to their neurodivergences as they uniquely impact their genders (Cavar and Baril, 2021).
  • 2021, Merri Lisa Johnson, "Neuroqueer Feminism: Turning with Tenderness toward Borderline Personality Disorder", in Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, Volume 46, Number 3, Spring 2021, page 636:
    At the risk of oversimplifying my argument by previewing these different concerns, neuroqueer feminism shifts emphasis from single-axis to intersectional feminism, from critiques of sexism to critiques of ableism, and from top-down discursive analyses to bottom-up material or phenomenological analyses of BPD.
  • 2021, Alex Masse, quoted in Kelly Chia, "Fairything and SIESKI dazzle live audience at Queer Code Pride Event", The Peak (Simon Fraser University), 27 September 2021, page 13:
    "More themes of gender euphoria, and more themes of neuroqueer love, and [...] just neuordivergent self love."
  • 2021, Cristal Robinson, "2021 Year in Review - A Legal Perspective", QNotes, 24 December 2021 - 6 January 2022, page 14:
    In addition to the rights of the neuroqueer community, she is also involved in helping many other diverse communities.
  • 2022, Monica C. Kleekamp, "Neuroqueer", in Encyclopedia of Queer Studies in Education (eds. Kamden K. Strunk & Stephanie Anne Shelton), page 412:
    Individuals claiming a neuroqueer identity recognize that discourses of person-first language or celebrated differences do not shift ableist constructions of neurological functioning as they purport to do.
  • 2022, Jessica Sage Rauchberg, "Imagining a Neuroqueer Technoscience", Studies in Social Justice, Volume 16, Issue 2, page 372:
    My conceptualization of neuroqueer technoscience is also strongly influenced by 3 my own experiences as a multiply neurodivergent queer femme.

Noun: "(neologism) the state or quality of being neuroqueer"

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  • 2019, Justine E. Enger, "'The Disability Rights Community Was Never Mine': Neuroqueer Disidentification", Gender & Society, Volume 33, Issue 1, February 2019, page 124:
    Neuroqueer is a queer/crip response to normative discussions about gender, sexuality, and disability as pathology.
  • 2019, Aimée Morrison, "Un)Reasonable, (Un)Necessary, and (In)Appropriate: Biographic Mediation of Neurodivergence in Academic Accommodations", Biography, Volume 42, Number 3, page 697:
    That is, “neuroqueer” has heuristic value in deconstructing the biographic mediation of faculty disability in accommodations regimes.
  • 2021, Ryan Lee Cartwright, Peculiar Places: A Queer Crip History of White Rural Nonconformity, University of Chicago Press (→ISBN), page 188:
    Autistic rhetoric scholar Melanie Yergeau theorizes neuroqueer as a kind of “asocially perverse” motioning. Corbett O'Toole elaborates that neuroqueerness ...
  • 2022, Peter Kuppers, Eco Soma: Pain and Joy in Speculative Performance Encounters, unnumbered page:
    For a primer on the issue of neuroqueer and its roots in multiple discourse fields from queer aversion therapy to antiautistic hate speech, see Yergeau 2018.

Noun: "(neologism) one who belongs to the neuroqueer community"

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  • 2018, M. Remi Yergeau, Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness, unnumbered page:
    In this regard, the potential of a prosthetic, specialized environment is the always-now —any change could result in neuroqueers backsliding into neuroqueerity.
  • 2019, Nadia Erlam, "Cognitive Dispossession: Ecofeminism, Entheogens, and Neuroqueering Drug Policy", in Psychedelic Mysteries of the Feminine: Creativity, Ecstasy, and Healing (eds. Chiara Baldini, David Luke, & Maria Papaspyrou), unnumbered page:
    For those of us who inhabit the spaces between the cracks, the neuroqueers who wander outside a prescribed notion of “cognitive normalcy,” we know things are not that simple.
  • 2020, Lindsay Eales & Danielle Peers, "Care haunts, hurts, heals: The promiscuous poetics of queer crip Mad care", Journal of Lesbian Studies, Volume 25, Issue 3:
    We affirm that there is nomore important queer project than for neuroqueers, crips, and non-normates more generally to survive with an essential flourish (Peers, 2018) in the face of that which would render our most basic needs undesirable, untenable, unreasonable, or “special.”

Verb: "(neologism) to make or become neuroqueer"

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2018 2019 2020
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  • 2018, M. Remi Yergeau, Authoring Autism: On Rhetoric and Neurological Queerness, unnumbered page:
    I believe in the potentialities of autistic stories and gestures, of neuroqueering what we've come to understand as language and being.
  • 2018, Anna Reading, "Neurodiversity and Communication Ethics: How Images of Autism Trouble Communication Ethics in the Globital Age", Cultural Studies Review, Volume 24, Number 2, page 120:
    King’s video neuroqueers the dominant popular cultural image of autistic people always having great powers of visual memory by showing a different version of this.
  • 2019, Nadia Erlam, "Cognitive Dispossession: Ecofeminism, Entheogens, and Neuroqueering Drug Policy", in Psychedelic Mysteries of the Feminine: Creativity, Ecstasy, and Healing (eds. Chiara Baldini, David Luke, & Maria Papaspyrou)
  • 2020, Monica C. Kleekamp, "'No! Turn the Pages!': Repositioning Neuroqueer Literacies", Journal of Literary Research, Volume 52, Issue 2, page 127:
    He neuroqueered his reading of this text by turning it upside down andbackward.
  • 2021, Jennifer Blair, "Understanding David Eastham’s Neuroqueerness", Studies in Canadian Literature, Volume 46, Number 1:
    I draw mainly from Yergeau’s theorization of the relationships between autism, queer bodies, and rhetoricity to argue that Eastham’s writing neuroqueers linguistic expression and the social conventions, []
  • 2021, Kristen L. Cole, "Neuroqueering interpersonal communication theory: listening to autistic object-orientations", Review of Communication, Volume 21, Issue 3:
    Listening to autistic narratives reveals possibilities for neuroqueering interpersonal communication theory.