The multiple meanings of ‘disability’ in interviews with amputees

Authors

  • Emily Heavey York St John University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v10i2.129

Keywords:

amputation, body, disability, medical model, narrative, social construction

Abstract

The link between having a lower-limb amputation and being disabled might seem self-evident. Indeed, the medical model of disability would suggest that lower-limb amputation causes disability, and that all lower-limb amputees are disabled people. Conversely, social models of disability would argue that limb loss does not determine disability, but that disabilities are rather caused by social structures and prejudices, while the interactional model suggests that there are both individual and social causes of disability. This paper draws on interviews with nine lower-limb amputees to address amputees’ own accounts of disability, in order to determine how (if at all) they make links between being an amputee and being disabled. The analysis shows that participants draw on various models of disability, as well as their own lived experiences, to construct subjective and diverse definitions of disability. Three interlinking definitions of disability recurred across the data: disability as a measure of personal (in)abilities; disability as a stigmatizing mask; and disability as an official status. Overall, disability was constructed as a complex, context-dependent label, which could not be reduced to any singular concept.

Author Biography

  • Emily Heavey, York St John University
    Emily Heavey has a PhD from King’s College, London. Her thesis focuses on the narrative constructions of bodies by people who have undergone amputations and mastectomies. Her research interests include disability, narrative analysis, narratives of illness and surgery, and the sociologies of the body.

Published

2014-03-11

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Heavey, E. (2014). The multiple meanings of ‘disability’ in interviews with amputees. Communication and Medicine, 10(2), 129-139. https://doi.org/10.1558/cam.v10i2.129

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