Young served as the editor for the Australian Broadcasting Corporation's online magazine Ramp Up.[8] Before joining the ABC, she had worked as an educator in public programs at Melbourne Museum, and hosted eight seasons of No Limits, a disability culture program on community television station Channel 31.[6]
In a Ramp Up editorial published in July 2012 she deconstructed society's habit of turning disabled people into what she called "inspiration porn", the idea that disabled people can do certain things "in spite" of their disability and are used to motivate non-disabled people, rather than uplifting disabled people.[9] The concept was further popularized in her April 2014 TEDxSydney talk, titled "I'm not your inspiration, thank you very much".[7]
Having previously appeared in several comedy showcases and group shows, Stella made her festival debut as a solo performer at the 2014 Melbourne International Comedy Festival. Her show Tales from the Crip, directed by Nelly Thomas, won her the award for best newcomer at the festival.[6]
She was a member of the boards of the Ministerial Advisory Council for the Department of Victorian Communities, Victorian Disability Advisory Council, the Youth Disability Advocacy Service and Women with Disabilities Victoria.[10]
Death
Young died unexpectedly in Melbourne, on 6 December 2014 of a suspected aneurysm.[11]
Legacy
In 2017 Young was inducted posthumously onto the Victorian Honour Roll of Women in recognition of her work as a "journalist, comedian, feminist and fierce disability activist".[12]
In 2020, S3.E7 of Loudermilk "Wind Beneath My Wings", was dedicated to the memory of Stella Young. The episode looks at the way our society views disability. Actor Mat Fraser plays Roger Frostly who quotes Young and her calls for an end to inauthentic “Inspiration Porn”.
In 2023 a bronze statue of Young in her wheelchair[13] by sculptor Danny Fraser was unveiled in her hometown of Stawell in Cato Park. Motion-activated audio at the statue provides a description to provide greater accessibility. As part of the Remembering Stella Young project the https://stellayoung.com.au/ website was created.
A street in the Canberra suburb of Denman Prospect, Stella Young Way, is named in her honour.
Bibliography
Contributed chapter
"The politics of exclusion", pp. 246–256, in: Destroying the joint, edited by Jane Caro, Read How You Want (2015, ISBN9781459687295).
References
^Bannister, Brooke (29 February 2012). "Who are you? Stella Young". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 7 December 2014.
^Stella Young (26 April 2013). "The Politics of Exclusion". Ramp Up. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. In 1982, the year I was born, the Victorian Government announced a major review of the education system for children with disabilities.