Queer Crips
Queer Crips: Disabled Gay Men and Their Stories is a 2004 anthology edited by Bob Guter and John R. Killacky. The book is a collection of personal stories from gay men with disabilities. The stories are told through a variety of literary genres, including poetry, prose, and interviews. The book won the 2004 Lambda Literary Award for the Anthologies/Non-fiction category. Contributors to the book include gay men such as Greg Walloch and Kenny Fries. Disability rights activist J. Quinn Brisben was also a contributor. After being turned down for publication by 30 publishers, the anthology was finally published by Harrington Park Press, an imprint of Haworth Press.[1] ReceptionThe Disability Studies Quarterly, the publication of the Society for Disability Studies, wrote a review of Queer Crips, stating that:[2]
In the book Crip Theory: Cultural Signs of Queerness and Disability, Robert McRuer notes that the stories in Queer Crips are "nonheteronormative in their broadest sense" and that it is "striking how much the convergence of disability and homosexuality in Queer Crips appears to authorize erotic inventiveness and play". McRuer further writes that the anthology implicitly draws a parallel between compulsory heterosexuality and "compulsory able-bodiedness".[3] See alsoReferences
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