Disability, relationship, and the negotiation of loss
Watermeyer B, Mckinney V. Med Humanit 2022;48:2–8. doi:10.1136/medhum-2020-01186
Abstract
Oppressive stereotypes of invalidity and tragedy have
positioned loss and grieving as contested issues in
the field of disability studies. Ascriptions of ’denial’
are rejected by many disabled people, as a reductive
medicalisation of their lived reality. For these and other
reasons, this paper asserts that disabled people are
afforded limited or awkward social spaces for grief, be it
to do with social positioning, embodiment, or any other
aspect of human experience. This is significant because
grieving may have an important relationship with
political mobilisation, both personal and collective. The
paper presents autoethnographic material from the life
of the second author, who has lived with quadriplegia
for more than three decades. Using ideas from critical
psychoanalysis it traces how political, relational and
intrapsychic mechanisms constrain and sanction his
expression of feelings of loss, contributing to a relational
predicament of melancholic suspension, analogous to
that attributed to subordinated racial groups. Here, one
is forced to strive for assimilation into an unattainable,
ideal social role, while simultaneously being alienated
from one’s inner experience, with implications for both
creativity and personal power. The paper concludes
that, paradoxically, stereotypes are countered not by
dissociation from grief, but rather the claiming of it.
https://mh.bmj.com/content/medhum/48/1/2.full.pdf
Watermeyer B, Mckinney V. Med Humanit 2022;48:2–8. doi:10.1136/medhum-2020-01186
Abstract
Oppressive stereotypes of invalidity and tragedy have
positioned loss and grieving as contested issues in
the field of disability studies. Ascriptions of ’denial’
are rejected by many disabled people, as a reductive
medicalisation of their lived reality. For these and other
reasons, this paper asserts that disabled people are
afforded limited or awkward social spaces for grief, be it
to do with social positioning, embodiment, or any other
aspect of human experience. This is significant because
grieving may have an important relationship with
political mobilisation, both personal and collective. The
paper presents autoethnographic material from the life
of the second author, who has lived with quadriplegia
for more than three decades. Using ideas from critical
psychoanalysis it traces how political, relational and
intrapsychic mechanisms constrain and sanction his
expression of feelings of loss, contributing to a relational
predicament of melancholic suspension, analogous to
that attributed to subordinated racial groups. Here, one
is forced to strive for assimilation into an unattainable,
ideal social role, while simultaneously being alienated
from one’s inner experience, with implications for both
creativity and personal power. The paper concludes
that, paradoxically, stereotypes are countered not by
dissociation from grief, but rather the claiming of it.
https://mh.bmj.com/content/medhum/48/1/2.full.pdf