NYU Center for Disability Studies
@center4ds.bsky.social
130 followers 49 following 32 posts
https://disabilitystudies.nyu.edu/
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Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
equitableforall.com
This was such a great event that this crip-of-colour writer needs to encourage folx to order Care at the End of the World: Dreaming of Infrastructure in Crip-of-Color Writing by the brilliant Professor Jina B. Kim: www.dukeupress.edu/care-at-the-...
center4ds.bsky.social
Together, they will explore how to refuse listening habits that discipline and punish, and how to reimagine accountability across media, law, and everyday life.
center4ds.bsky.social
Lakshmi Padmanabhan (Film Scholar, Northwestern University), Jordan Lord (Artist and Writer, Colorado College), and LaCharles Ward (Curator and Scholar, Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture).
center4ds.bsky.social
This launch event brings together three respondents who take up the book’s invitation to think documentary and sound alongside raciolinguistics, disability access activism, and legal forensics:
center4ds.bsky.social
Pooja Rangan examines how documentary listening—through habits she calls neutral, entitled, and juridical—can reinforce structures of profiling, exclusion, and carceral capture, even when framed as progressive or ethical.
center4ds.bsky.social
How does listening in documentary become a proxy for justice—and what other kinds of listening might be possible? In The Documentary Audit: Listening and the Limits of Accountability (Columbia University Press, 2025),
center4ds.bsky.social
Tomorrow! The Documentary Audit: Listening and the Limits of Accountability Book Launch, 6:00–7:30 PM ET @ Michelson Theater, 721 Broadway, 6th floor & Zoom.

register for irl or url here: mailchi.mp/nyu/document...

@p8ja.bsky.social
Tomorrow! The Documentary Audit by Pooja Rangan, at NYU & Zoom
mailchi.mp
center4ds.bsky.social
Event is free and open to the public but requires registration.

ASL and live captions will be provided.

Please email accessibility needs as they relate to this
event to [email protected].
center4ds.bsky.social
highlight the imaginative blueprints for survival left by radical writers of color such as Leah Lakshmi Piepzna-Samarasinha and Octavia Butler.
center4ds.bsky.social
which examines the imaginative work of disabled, queer, and feminist of color literary visionaries writing after major U.S. welfare reform. Together, Schalk and Kim will foreground the necessity of a disability approach to challenging U.S. infrastructural violence and manufactured scarcity, and . .
center4ds.bsky.social
How can feminist-of-color disability politics help us navigate contemporary crises of care and decimated social safety nets? Join Sami Schalk and Jina B. Kim for a discussion of Jina's new book, Care at the End of the World: Dreaming of Infrastructure in Crip-of-Color Writing (Duke UP, 2025), . . .
center4ds.bsky.social
Tix @ lifeafterfilm.com/screening and use the PROMO CODE: NYUCDS for $4 off any screening during the film’s week-long run July 18-24.
lifeafterfilm.com
center4ds.bsky.social
NYU’s Center for Disability Studies is honored to co-present a screening of the Sundance-award winning documentary LIFE AFTER at NYC’s Film Forum on July 23 at 7:10pm.
Over an orange background, black text: “Multitude Films. Life After. July 23. 7:10PM. Film Forum NYC. Co-Presented by ReelAbilities Film Festival. Tickets at filmforum.org/events/event/life-after-july-23. Introduced by Mara Mills of NYU’s Center for Disability Studies, followed by talkback with director Reid Davenport, activist and author Emily Ladau, and comedian Maysoon Zayid.” In the middle, an archival image of a disabled Black man with crutches protesting next to a large pink sign that says “Not Dead. We want to live!” At the bottom, symbols at the bottom for Audio Description, Open Captions and ASL, followed by logos for Film Forum and NYU’s Center for Disability Studies.
Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
louhicky.bsky.social
Come by next Saturday if you are interested in crip authorship, including histories of subtitling, visual description and plain language writing workshop.

Co-hosted with @center4ds.bsky.social
ndkane.bsky.social
Crip Authorship comes to the V&A! Pleased to host @maramills.bsky.social and Rebecca Sanchez on 21st June for a special event with @louhicky.bsky.social Kelsie Acton and Georgina Kleege. Tickets to the in person event and workshop here, online stream below: www.vam.ac.uk/event/135rMr...
Crip Authorship: Disability as a Method for Creativity - Special event at V&A South Kensington · V&A
An afternoon of talks, a screening, and a workshop exploring disability, authorship, and access.
www.vam.ac.uk
Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
ndkane.bsky.social
Crip Authorship comes to the V&A! Pleased to host @maramills.bsky.social and Rebecca Sanchez on 21st June for a special event with @louhicky.bsky.social Kelsie Acton and Georgina Kleege. Tickets to the in person event and workshop here, online stream below: www.vam.ac.uk/event/135rMr...
Crip Authorship: Disability as a Method for Creativity - Special event at V&A South Kensington · V&A
An afternoon of talks, a screening, and a workshop exploring disability, authorship, and access.
www.vam.ac.uk
Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
louhicky.bsky.social
I'm giving a new talk on *"Subtitles on Fire"* at the V&A for the Design and Disability show. Featuring a screening of *Captioning and Captioning* — celebrating all things crip authorship with @maramills.bsky.social and Rebecca Sanchez
#DesignAndDisability www.vam.ac.uk/event/135rMr...
Crip Authorship: Disability as a Method for Creativity - Special event at V&A South Kensington · V&A
An afternoon of talks, a screening, and a workshop exploring disability, authorship, and access.
www.vam.ac.uk
Reposted by NYU Center for Disability Studies
autisticadvocacy.org
On this day in 2020, we lost Stacey Park Milbern, a fierce advocate and activist who taught us about disability justice, love, organizing, and so much more. Spend a moment today with some of her most important works here: disabilityvisibilityproject.com/2020/05/23/s...
There is a textured grey gradient background with a light rounded corner rectangle. Blue text reads: Remembering Stacey Park Milbern. Black text reads: On this day in 2020, we lost Stacey Park Milbern, a fierce advocate and activist who taught us about disability justice, love, organizing, and so much more. There is a quotation in italics: I want to leave a legacy of disabled people knowing we are powerful and beautiful because of who we are, not despite of it.” There is a picture of Stacey, a mixed race Korean and white person outside in front of plants. She has short dark hair, glasses, a white and blue striped shirt, and has a visible trach tube.
center4ds.bsky.social
Join us on Friday at 1PM EST for a panel on Crip Authorship: Disability as Method with Kelsie Acton, @remiyergeau.bsky.social, @jaivirdi.com, Rebecca Sanchez, and @maramills.bsky.social, who will delve into the books' central theme of translation. Livestream here:
us02web.zoom.us/j/8588092479...
Poster for Panel Discussion 'Crip Authorship'. On Friday, 16 May 2025, at 7:00 PM, a panel discussion titled "Crip Authorship" will take place at Kampnagel, K2.Editors Mara Mills and Rebecca Sanchez, along with three contributing authors, will discuss their volume Crip Authorship: Disability as Method. The discussion will focus on how disability and authorship are interconnected both aesthetically and structurally, with a particular emphasis on the theme of translation. The event will be conducted in English and German and will include interpretation in German Sign Language (DGS) and American Sign Language (ASL).