Taught by David Adelman, Networked Disability Cultures is an undergraduate class offered by the Digital Studies Institute at the University of Michigan. In this class, learners work from an understanding of accessibility as a lived practice that generates embodied insights about the digital and physical world around us.
The internet has long been a space for disability community, mutual aid, and activism. Kate Ellis and Mike Kent, writing in Disability and New Media, suggest that the internet has “opened up” the world for disabled people. This course offers forth an opportunity to critically (and creatively) engage this sentiment, and others like it—what is disability culture online? Who gets to produce it? How does it get produced? What are its impacts across culture and technology? The course offers the opportunity to seriously (and playfully) engage these topics as they emerge, exist, and are debated and scrutinized online. No familiarity with disability studies is presumed or required, and we will be taking a deliberately intersectional approach to the study of disability culture(s), paying particular attention to the intersections of race, gender, sexuality, and class alongside disability in virtual spaces.
Our projects
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Accessing School of Kinesiology Building [SKB]
Address: 830 N. University Ave., Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1048 By Laura Zhang and William Shen Project Description: The Kinesiology Building at the University of Michigan, originally constructed in…
4 min read
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Accessibility on Tiktok Podcast
Transcript (made with Speech to text): Hi my name is Annie Costello I’m a junior at the University of Michigan here and I would like to talk about…
4 min read
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Access Podcast: University of Michigan
Cristina Murdick Project Description: For my final project I created a podcast with the purpose of exploring public thoughts on the accessibility of the University of Michigan campus.…
4 min read
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Access in the University of Michigan’s Dorms
TRANSCRIPT: The University of Michigan admits thousands of students every year, and as most schools, needs housing to accommodate them. Mason Hall, first built in 1841, was the…
4 min read