Foreword – Karen Sayer
Introduction – Iain Hutchison, Martin Atherton and Jaipreet
Virdi
Part I: Attitudes
1 Restoration to usefulness: Victorian middle-class attitudes
towards the healthcare of the working poor – Amy W Farnbach
Pearson
2 Imperial lives – confronting the legacies of empire, disability
and the Victorians – Esme Cleall
3 Disabling the author in Mid-Victorian realist fiction: case
studies of George Eliot and Harriet Martineau – Deborah M Fratz
Part II: Interventions
4 Medicalising deafness in Victorian London: the Royal Ear
Hospital, 1816-1916 – Jaipreet Virdi
5 Drunkenness, degeneration, and disability in England – Joanne
Woiak
6 Victorian medical awareness of childhood language disabilities –
Paula Hellal and Marjorie Lorch
7 ‘Happiness and usefulness increased”: Consuming ability in the
antebellum artificial limb market – Caroline Lieffers
Part III: Legacies
8 The disabled child in an industrial metropolis: Glasgow’s
children’s hospital, Scottish convalescent homes ‘in the country’,
and east park home for infirm children – Iain Hutchison
9 The panopticon: Towards an intimate history of special schools
for the blind – Fred Reid
10 Allowed to be idle: Perpetuating Victorian attitudes to deafness
and employability in United Kingdom social policy – Martin
Atherton
Index
Iain Hutchison is Research Affiliate in Economic & Social
History at the University of Glasgow.
Martin Atherton is Retired Course Leader for British Sign
Language and Deaf Studies at the University of Central
Lancashire.
Jaipreet Virdi is Assistant Professor in History at the
University of Delaware.
'Disability and the Victorians: Attitudes, Interventions, Legacies
is a very timely work. In the midst of a global pandemic that has
left many people newly impaired, there is an increased need for
scholarship that provides frameworks for coming to terms with
disability as a sociocultural phenomenon and a lived identity.
[...] Disability and the Victorians makes an important contribution
to the history of medicine and attitudes toward disability in
Victorian Britain and beyond and provides a useful resource for
scholars of nineteenth-century Britain.'
Joyce L. Huff, Journal of British Studies
Disability and the Victorians certainly fulfils its editors’ desire
to generate debate and spur further research: its contents
encourage critical reflection on disabled people’s experiences in
the present day, thus enabling us to see how monumentally important
the task of exploring the history of disability is.
Caitlin Doley (University of York), British Association for
Victorian Studies
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