Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People
By Alice Wong
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About this ebook
16 essays by 17 disabled writers, activists and artists. This is crip wisdom for the people.
Edited by Alice Wong, founder of the Disability Visibility Project, Resistance and Hope will transform the way you think about activism, leadership and social justice.
How do we fight back in an era of uncertainty, institutionalized cruelty, and widespread tolerance for ableism and hate? Written in 2017, the authors explore resistance, hope, self care, disability rights and justice, and the politics of Trump in a series of provocative, challenging essays. They bring the power of intersectional cross-platform organizing and the strength found through mutual accountability to words that will help you define the resistance you want to fight for, not just the harm you want to react against.
Dare to dream bigger and create space for all with this visionary essay anthology from multiply marginalized disabled people redefining an inclusive climate of resistance. The time is NOW!
Praise for Resistance and Hope:
"Get this book right now! Resistance and Hope is the disability justice Bible you've been waiting for. If you want to read a book chock full of disabled Black, brown, queer, trans genius, real talk and vision, this book will give you comrades reassurances that we are brilliant revolutionaries and a plethora of tools and visions for how we make the road by limping, crutching, rolling, signing and stimming. I am so grateful for Alice Wong for doing the cultural work of putting this together and for every single writer in this book."
— Leah Piepzna-Samarasinha, performer, community organizer, and author of Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (Arsenal Pulp Press, October 1, 2018)
“Until our movements are fully intersectional, we will not make the progress necessary to build the equitable society we all deserve. Resistance and Hope is a necessary manual for all of us as we learn how to build movements that are as inclusive as the world we hope to see.”
— Brittany Packnett, activist, educator, writer, Co-Founder of Campaign Zero and Co-Host of Pod Save the People
"Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People is a timely and must-read collection of essays by some of the most cutting edge leaders in the Disability Rights Movement. If you are interested in learning more about disability rights and justice, activism, and current times we are living in today take the time to read and may these pieces evoke discussions in your communities as we fight for justice and equity.”
— Judy Heumann, Disability Activist
“A rare and powerful collection that demonstrates hopeful resistance. If you want to know how to fight and survive when Trump cuts try to destroy people you love, then read this book. These 17 authors outline strategies for successful resistance that emerge from communities committed to race, age, language, queer and disability diversity, equality and justice. As Anita Cameron writes, ‘To resist, one must have hope. Without it, we are lost.’ This book is a much-needed guide for resistance in these despairing times.”
— Corbett OToole, Co-Founder and Publisher of Reclamation Press and author of Fading Scars: My Queer Disability History
Anthology Contributors:
Lydia X. Z. Brown
Anita Cameron
Cyree Jarelle Johnson
DJ Kuttin Kandi
Mari Kurisato
Talila A. Lewis
Noemi Martinez
Stacey Milbern
Mia Mingus
Lev Mirov
Leroy Moore
Shain M. Neumeier
Naomi Ortiz
Victoria Rodríguez-Roldán
Vilissa K. Thompson
Aleksei Valentín
Maysoon Zayid
Editorial Assistant: Robin M. Eames
Book cover by Micah Bazant
Alice Wong
Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People is the first self-published anthology by the Disability Visibility Project.Alice Wong, Editor of Resistance and Hope, is a disability activist, media maker, and consultant. She is the Founder and Director of the Disability Visibility Project (DVP), an online community dedicated to recording, amplifying, and sharing disability stories and culture.Alice has a new anthology, DISABILITY VISIBILITY: First-person stories from the 21st century, published by Vintage Books (June 30, 2020). For more: https://disabilityvisibilityproject.com/book/Twitter: @SFdirewolf @DisVisibilityEmail: DisabilityVisibilityProject@gmail.com
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Reviews for Resistance and Hope
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Book preview
Resistance and Hope - Alice Wong
Praise for Resistance and Hope
"Get this book right now! Resistance and Hope is the disability justice Bible you've been waiting for. If you want to read a book chock full of disabled Black, brown, queer, trans genius, real talk and vision, if you want to understand that six million dollar question ‘What is disability justice?,’ if you're a sick or disabled or Mad or neurodivergent or Deaf person figuring out how to survive fascism and create the world we want and deserve (or an abled or neurotypical person trying to catch up with us), this book will give you comrades reassurances that we are brilliant revolutionaries and a plethora of tools and visions for how we make the road by limping, crutching, rolling, signing and stimming. I am so grateful for Alice Wong for doing the cultural work of putting this together and for every single writer in this book."
— Leah Piepzna-Samarasinha, performer, community organizer, and author of Care Work: Dreaming Disability Justice (Arsenal Pulp Press, October 1, 2018)
• • •
"Until our movements are fully intersectional, we will not make the progress necessary to build the equitable society we all deserve. Resistance and Hope is a necessary manual for all of us as we learn how to build movements that are as inclusive as the world we hope to see."
— Brittany Packnett, activist, educator, writer, Co-Founder of Campaign Zero and Co-Host of Pod Save the People
• • •
"There have been many conversations about which stories deserve to be told and which do not. However, the essays in Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People not only deserve to be told but heard and seen by people who want to see themselves and people who want a stronger and more important view of the world and the fight ahead of us."
— Keah Brown, journalist and author of The Pretty One (Atria Books, Spring 2019)
• • •
"Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People is a timely and must-read collection of essays by some of the most cutting edge leaders in the Disability Rights Movement. If you are interested in learning more about disability rights and justice, activism, and current times we are living in today take the time to read and may these pieces evoke discussions in your communities as we fight for justice and equity."
— Judy Heumann, Disability Activist
• • •
It is so necessary for people who have been historically marginalized to tell their own stories. I am proud to know Alice Wong, who is someone dedicated to telling these stories with authenticity and integrity.
— Blair Imani, Author of Modern HERstory and Founder of Equality for HER
• • •
A rare and powerful collection that demonstrates hopeful resistance. If you want to know how to fight and survive when Trump cuts try to destroy people you love, then read this book. These 17 authors outline strategies for successful resistance that emerge from communities committed to race, age, language, queer and disability diversity, equality and justice. As Anita Cameron writes, ‘To resist, one must have hope. Without it, we are lost.’ This book is a much-needed guide for resistance in these despairing times.
— Corbett OToole, Co-Founder and Publisher of Reclamation Press and author of Fading Scars: My Queer Disability History
• • •
"We cannot talk about true democracy and true diversity in America if the voices and ideas and work of disabled people are not given space at the welcome table. Alice Wong, long a tireless leader and visionary advocate for the disabled community, has assembled a powerful new anthology, Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People, featuring 17 brilliant and bold disabled activists and artists. In the age of Trump this collection is a revelation, bringing from the margins fresh new ways to look at America, and fresh new ways to look at ourselves."
— Kevin Powell, author of The Education of Kevin Powell: A Boy’s Journey into Manhood
• • •
"In Resistance and Hope, activist, advocate, and scholar Alice Wong brings together new voices and perspectives on living with disabilities that come from an inclusive array of multiply marginalized disabled people. In the spirit of nothing about us without us, Resistance and Hope offers us an urgent and needed collection of crip wisdom
on belonging, community, and self-care that goes far toward showing us how to build the kind of just world we want to live in together."
— Rosemarie Garland-Thomson, disability bioethicist and educator at Emory University and UCLA and author of Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture and Literature
• • •
An instructive and empowering anthology on the lived struggles of persons with disabilities. You will finish this book hopeful, optimistic, and ready to rebuild our nation for all to shine.
— Arjun Singh Sethi, activist and author of American Hate: Survivors Speak Out (The New Press, August 7, 2018)
Table of Contents
Praise for Resistance and Hope
Introduction
Rebel - Don’t Be Palatable: Resisting Co-optation and Fighting for the World We Want by Lydia X. Z. Brown
To Resist, One Must Have Hope! by Anita Cameron
Barron Trump's (Alleged) Autistic Childhood by Cyree Jarelle Johnson
Hip Hop & Disability Liberation: Finding Resistance, Hope & Wholeness by DJ Kuttin Kandi and Leroy Moore
They Had Names by Mari Kurisato
the birth of resistance: courageous dreams, powerful nobodies & revolutionary madness by Talila A. Lewis
Renewal of Faith and Hope by Noemi Martinez
Reflections as Congress Debates our Futures by Stacey Milbern
Building Back Belonging, Hope and Possibility by Mia Mingus
Beyond Hope by Lev Mirov
Back into the Fires that Forged Us by Shain M. Neumeier
Self-Care When Things Shatter by Naomi Ortiz
Who Gets to Be the Activist? by Victoria Rodríguez-Roldán
The Audacity of Hope In the Make America Great Again Era by Vilissa K. Thompson
Jewish and Disabled: Finding Kavanah and Tikkun Olam in Activism by Aleksei Valentín
Don’t Bring Cotton Candy to a Nuclear War by Maysoon Zayid
About the Team
About the Disability Visibility Project
Introduction
As the results of the Presidential election rolled in the evening of Election Day 2016, my heart raced. I felt unsafe and a sense of urgency to do something. In my moments of fear and panic towards what I knew would happen, I was strangely comforted by the fact that disabled people have been surviving and resisting for millennia.
Resistance and Hope: Essays by Disabled People is a powerful collection of essays by disabled writers, artists, activists, and dreamers. What is the relationship between resistance and hope? What can disabled people share with the world during this time of uncertainty and unrest? You will learn from a wide range of perspectives from multiply marginalized disabled people on where we are right now, where we’ve been, and where we’re going. Share this anthology with everyone everywhere—on social media, in the classroom, at the kitchen table, with your friends and neighbors.
The idea for the Resistance and Hope anthology developed that evening in November as I wondered what could I do to fight back and create something of value for all of us. I reflected on Sins Invalid’s show in October 2016, Birthing, Dying, Becoming Crip Wisdom,
and realized we weren’t entering into a new moment; every moment is cyclical and tied to living, resisting, dying, and rebirth. We are all linked to one another for survival. On a related note, thank you to artist Micah Bazant for the beautiful book cover. Mushrooms are my symbol of resilience and interdependence for this publication.
It is my intention for you, dear reader, to soak up crip wisdom from these writers and our ancestors. Think about your privilege, get angry, and become involved in your various communities.
With gratitude and solidarity,
Alice Wong, Editor and Publisher
Founder and Director, Disability Visibility Project
Rebel - Don’t Be Palatable: Resisting Co-optation and Fighting for the World We Want
Lydia X. Z. Brown
Content notes: abuse in activist communities, activist praxis, accountability, intracommunity harm, compliance culture, conflicting access needs, cure rhetoric, respectability politics, multimodality
As a writer, thinker, educator, and organizer, I cannot stop thinking about the innumerable ways the world we live in is so violent, and how I desperately long for a better world, what that world might look like, and how we might get there. That is the work of social justice, or what could be described as laboring for liberation.
In the past few months, I have witnessed and felt a shift in the spaces I live and work in—heightened fear, rage, and loss, much of it tied directly or indirectly to the shift in the U.S.’s political landscape. That shift is real and valid, but for me, the election of Donald Trump wasn’t surprising. It angered and upset me, for sure, but there was nothing shocking about the United States choosing