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The Social Construction of Intellectual Disability

The Social Construction of Intellectual Disability

The Social Construction of Intellectual Disability

Mark Rapley , Murdoch University, Western Australia
June 2004
Available
Paperback
9780521005296

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£41.00
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eBook

    Intellectual disability is usually thought of as a form of internal, individual affliction, little different from diabetes, paralysis or chronic illness. This study, the first book-length application of discursive psychology to intellectual disability, shows that what we usually understand as being an individual problem is actually an interactional, or social, product. Through a range of case studies, which draw upon ethnomethodological and conversation analytic scholarship, the book shows how persons categorized as 'intellectually disabled' are produced, as such, in and through their moment-by-moment interaction with care staff and other professionals. Mark Rapley extends and reformulates current work in disability studies and offers a reconceptualisation of intellectual disability as both a professionally ascribed diagnostic category and an accomplished - and contested - social identity. Importantly, the book is grounded in data drawn from naturally-occurring, rather than professionally orchestrated, social interaction.

    • First full-length application of discursive psychology to the study of intellectual disability
    • Detailed transcripts of actual interaction between professionals and people categorized as 'intellectually disabled'
    • Challenges many of the assumptions of disability studies

    Reviews & endorsements

    'The book presents a timely challenge to our profession. Mark Rapley's writing just gets better: make sure you get the chance to learn from him.' Clinical Psychology

    '… this is an excellent book. It is a timely reminder in an intellectual domain becoming increasingly deadlocked by polarising debate of the need for detailed empirical analysis.' Disability & Society

    See more reviews

    Product details

    June 2004
    Paperback
    9780521005296
    260 pages
    228 × 151 × 16 mm
    0.42kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgements
    • A note on the cover
    • A note on transcription notation
    • Introduction
    • 1. A discursive psychological approach
    • 2. Intellectual disability as diagnostic and social category
    • 3. The interactional production of 'dispositional' characteristics: or why saying 'yes' to one's interrogators may be a smart strategy
    • 4. Matters of identity
    • 5. Talk to dogs, infants and...
    • 6. A deviant case (co-written with Alec McHoul)
    • 7. Some tentative conclusions
    • Appendices.
      Author
    • Mark Rapley , Murdoch University, Western Australia

      Mark Rapley is Assistant Professor of Psychology at Murdoch University. His work applies discursive psychology to questions of power, in particular the interactional and rhetorical production of persons with intellectual disabilities, the 'mentally ill' and Aboriginal Australians. His most recent books are Quality of Life Research: A Critical Introduction (2003) and, with Susan Hansen and Alex McHoul, Beyond Help: A Consumer's Guide to Psychology (2003).