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Guest blog post: Digging Up Disability History by Andrew Pulrang

Andrew Pulrang is one of our media partners and a prolific blogger over at Disability Thinking. The following is an excerpt of a post he published on July 23, 2014. Since the Disability Visibility Project celebrates history, we were obviously interested in this piece.

Digging Up Disability History

Andrew Pulrang

I have seen several versions of this story about the skeleton of a person with Down Syndrome, dated to the 5th or 6th century A.D. Most of the references present as established fact the idea that because the child was buried the same way, with the same burial rites as others in her clan, it shows that people with Down Syndrome were fully integrated, valued members of their communities, even in the “Dark Ages”. Even though this article acknowledges how little we really know about ancient attitudes towards disabilities from such sparse evidence, I still find this new evidence tantalizing.

A few years ago, one of the first audiobooks I listened to was History Of The World, Updated, by J. M. Roberts. In one of the early chapters, Roberts mentions that archeologists had found the prehistoric remains of a man who appeared to have had a physical impairment. Yet, he also appeared to have died fairly old. Roberts speculates that the man probably had to be sustained by his clan, and indeed, this man, too, seemed to have been buried surrounded by gathered flowers and nick-nacks … indicating that the people of that age were more than just beasts that looked human. They were, just maybe, compassionate and sophisticated in their understanding of human value.

At the other end of the historical scale, the article refers to the fact that in the 1800s, people with disabilities were quite often integrated into their communities, and only separated and institutionalized later, during the “Progressive Era”. In fact, how the well-meaning “progressives” of the early 20th century dealt with disability is an important reminder of how good people throughout history often get things wrong … sometimes terribly wrong … and confuse altruism and charity, with prejudice and condescension.

For the rest of the blog post: http://disabilitythinking.blogspot.com/2014/07/digging-up-disability-history.html


Do you have a blog post you’d like to share with the Disability Visibility Project? Would you like to write a guest post for us? Email Alice: 

DisabilityVisibilityProject@gmail.com

 


 

For more about Andrew: http://disabilitythinking.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html

Disability Thinking blog: http://disabilitythinking.blogspot.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/apulrang

Twitter: @AndrewPulrang

Tumblr: http://disabilitythinking.tumblr.com

LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/pub/andrew-pulrang/7/647/945

Email: apulrang@icloud.com

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