Extraordinary normalcy, ableist rehabilitation, and sporting ablenationalism: The cultural (re)production of paralympic disability narratives

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Abstract

In the United Kingdom, significant changes have occurred in the Paralympic media production environment and style of Paralympic broadcasting. Given the generative nature of media texts on cultural representation, the authors explore the circulation of disability narratives in contemporary Paralympic media coverage. Drawing on an integrated data set that brings together textual analysis and audience perceptions, the authors highlight the presence of three disability narratives, termed: extraordinary normalcy, ableist rehabilitation, and sporting ablenationalism. The authors unpack the ways these three narratives differ from the widely and commonly used "supercrip"critique and discuss the implications of these narratives, and the wider cultural discourses and dialogue they generate, in terms of inclusion/exclusion and progressive social change.

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Pullen, E., Jackson, D., Silk, M., Howe, P. D., & Silva, C. F. (2021, September 1). Extraordinary normalcy, ableist rehabilitation, and sporting ablenationalism: The cultural (re)production of paralympic disability narratives. Sociology of Sport Journal. Human Kinetics Publishers Inc. https://doi.org/10.1123/SSJ.2020-0093

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