Skip to content

Data derived from the Bibliography of British and Irish History.

About the Bibliography of British and Irish History (BBIH)

The Bibliography of British and Irish History is an essential tool for the study, research, and teaching of British and Irish history. It is the largest and most comprehensive guide available to published writing on the history of British and Irish relations with the rest of the world, including the British empire and the Commonwealth, as well as British and Irish domestic history from 55 BCE to the present day. BBIH can also be used to study, teach and research a wide range of interdisciplinary historical fields such as the histories of race and ethnicity, migration, gender, disability, the environment, and emotions.

The Bibliography is the essential resource for historical study, teaching and research and is a research project of the UK’s Institute of Historical Research (IHR) and the Royal Historical Society (RHS), and is published by Brepols. With new records added three times a year, BBIH provides up-to-date information on over 640,440: 

  • History books, articles, chapters, edited collections (published from the early 1900s to present) 
  • History theses (submitted late 1990s to 2022).

These records are searchable by a wide range of facets including: title, author, chronology, date and form of publication, historical topic, and geographical region.

BBIH and histories of disability

UK Disability History Month runs annually from mid-November to mid-December. The following list offers 459 recent publications focusing on the histories of disability, which is a subcategory of medical history and health in the BBIH subject tree. BBIH’s hierarchical subject tree offers a powerful way of searching by subject because it uses terminology systematically applied to records by BBIH’s editors: your results will not depend on the appearance of words in titles or in keywords provided by authors. You can learn more about the subject tree here.

The books, articles, book chapters and theses in this list were published between 2010 and 2022. Our coverage of recently published titles is ongoing, and further records will be added in future updates of the Bibliography.

Access the full text from BBIH

Records for journal articles may include a ‘Full text’ link.

This link will take you to the abstract of the article via the publisher’s website. If you have access to a library that subscribes to the journal, you’ll then be able to go straight to the full text (you may need to log on to your institutional library). Some books also have ‘Full text’ links: these connect to eBook or free Open Access versions of the work where they’ve been made available by the publisher.

BBIH online help pack

You can learn more about using BBIH by visiting our page of online tutorials, which include: 

  • The basics of searching, including how to use the subject tree 
  • How to use your results 
  • How to keep up-to-date with the latest published research in your field or manage your reference lists or bibliographies 
  • Behind-the-scenes guide to how BBIH is compiled. 

Short video guides are designed for: 

  • New undergraduates and those planning and researching a final year dissertation 
  • MA and PhD students for whom BBIH is essential for writing a literature review and studying secondary fields of interest. 

Lecturers, teachers and librarians will find it helpful that the Bibliography’s online tutorials can all be embedded in a virtual learning environment (VLE). Presentations are also available here to promote the Bibliography to your students and staff.  

Subscribe to BBIH
Full access to BBIH’s 640,440 records is via subscription: many UK and international university and research libraries subscribe and provide full access to members. Personal subscriptions are also available.

1)Harriet Martineau and the Impersonality of Pain 
Rachel Ablow  
Victorian Studies, 56.4 (2014) 675-697
 
2)Joseph and Mary : a case study in deaf family history 
Neil J. Alderman   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society, 2011)
 
3)Art for life : the inspiring story of the British mouth and foot painting artists 
Marc Alexander  
(London: Mouth and Foot Painting Artists, 2010)
 
4)“Homes away from Home” and “Happy Prisoners”: Disabled Veterans, Space, and Masculinity in Britain, 1944–1950 
Julie Anderson  
Journal of Social History, 53.3 (2020) 698-715
Full text 
5)The Undefeated: Propaganda, rehabilitation and post-war Britain 
Julie Anderson  
in: Propaganda and conflict : war, media and shaping the twentieth century, ed. by Mark Connelly, Jo Fox, Stefan Goebel and Ulf Schmidt (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2019), pp. 209-227.
 
6)Separating the surgical and commercial: Space, prosthetics and the First World War 
Julie Anderson  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 158-178.
 
7)‘Jumpy Stump’ : amputation and trauma in the First World War 
Julie Anderson  
First World War Studies, 6.1 (2015) 9-19
Full text 
8)Stoics : creating identities at St Dunstan’s 1914-20 
Julie Anderson  
in: Men after war, ed. by Stephen McVeigh and Nicola Cooper, Routledge research in gender and history, 16 (New York: Routledge, 2013), pp. 79-91.
 
9)War, disability and rehabilitation in Britain : “soul of a nation” 
Julie Anderson  
Cultural history of modern war (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2011)
 
10)Rehabilitation and restoration : orthopaedics and disabled soldiers in Germany and Britain in the First World War 
Julie Anderson   & Heather R. Perry  
Medicine, Conflict and Survival, 30.4 (2014) 227-251
Full text 
11)From “Freak Show” to “Charity Case” : The “Containment” of Deafness in Wilkie Collins’s Hide and Seek 
Hannah Anglin-Jaffe  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 7.1 (2013) 53-69
Full text 
12)Deafness, community and culture in Britain : leisure and cohesion, 1945-95 
Martin Atherton  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2012)
2 review(s)
 
13)Deserving of Charity or Deserving of Better? The Continuing Legacy of the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act for Britain’s Deaf Population 
Martin Atherton  
Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal, 7.3 & 4 (2011) [s.p.]
 
14)Miracle Children : Medieval Hagiography and Childhood Imperfection 
Anne E. Bailey  
Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 47.3 (2017) 267-285
 
15)History of CSWs : communication support workers 
Maria Bailey   & Andrew Owen  
(Gloucestershire: Talk With Sign Books Ltd, 2012)
 
16)Sex & drugs & rock’n’roll : the life of Ian Dury 
Richard Balls  
(London: Omnibus, 2011)
 
17)Disability, health, and retirement in the United Kingdom 
James Banks  , Richard Blundell  , Antoine Bozio   & Carl Emmerson  
in: Social security programs and retirement around the world : historical trends in mortality and health, employment, and disability insurance participation and reforms, ed. by David A. Wise and National Bureau of Economic Research, National Bureau of Economic Research conference report (Chicago (IL); London: Chicago University Press, 2012), pp. 41-78.
 
18)They Shall See his Face: The Story of Amy Oxley Wilkinson and her Visionary Blind School in China 
Linda Banks   & Robert Banks  
(Sydney: Acorn Press, 2017)
1 review(s)
 
19)Wilful Blindness: Sleeping Sickness and Onchocerciasis in Colonial Northern Ghana, 1909–1957  
David Bannister  
Social History of Medicine, 35.2 (2022) 635-660
Full text 
20)“A marvellous and strange event” : racconti di nascite mostruose nell’Inghilterra della prima età moderna 
Luca Baratta  
(Firenze: Firenze University Press, 2016)
1 review(s)
 
21)Against all odds : the Carlson House legacy 
David Barnsley  
(Studley, Warwickshire: Brewin Books, 2018)
 
22)Splish Splash : Barry Beavers Disabled Swimming Club 1981-2017 
Barry Beavers Disabled Swimming Club  
1 volume (unpaged) ([Barry]: [Barry Beavers Disabled Swimming Club], [2017])
 
23)Reassembling Disabled Identities: Employment, Ex-servicemen and the Poppy Factory 
Emily Bartlett  
Journal of Social History, 54.1 (2020) 210-236
Full text 
24)Ophelia’s Mad Songs and Performing Story in Early Modern England 
Samantha Bassler  
in: Music, myth and story in medieval and early modern culture, ed. by Katherine (Music tutor) Butler and Samantha Bassler, Studies in medieval and Renaissance music, 19 (Martlesham: The Boydell Press, [2019]), pp. 169-186.
Full text 
25)Disability networks in the Campsey manuscript 
Christopher Baswell  
in: The French of medieval England : essays in honour of Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, ed. by Jocelyn Wogan-Browne, Thelma S. Fenster and Carolyn P. Collette (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2017), pp. 157-174.
 
26)Military welfare in the Midland counties during and after the British civil wars, 1642-c.1700 
Stewart Beale  
Midland History, 45.1 (2020) 18-35
Full text 
27)Monstrous kinds: body, space, and narrative in Renaissance representations of disability  
Elizabeth B. Bearden  
Corporealities (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2019)
1 review(s)
Full text 
28)Patronage and insanity: tolerance, reputation and mental disorder in the British navy 1740–1820 
Catherine Beck  
Historical Research, 94.263 (2021) 73-95
Full text 
29)Everyday Design in Early America: The Case for Gout  
Nicole Belolan  
in: Making disability modern : design histories, ed. by Bess Williamson and Elizabeth E. Guffey (London; New York: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2020), pp. 19-42.
Full text 
30)Making Obesity Fat: Crip Estrangement in Shakespeare’s Henry IV, Part 1 
Royce Best  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 39.4 (2019)
Full text 
31)The Rhetoric of Disfigurement in First World War Britain 
Suzannah Biernoff  
Social History of Medicine, 24.3 (2011) 666-685
Full text 
32)Making and remaking the civilian soldier : The World War I Photographs of Horace Nicholls 
Suzannah Biernoff   & Jane Tynan  
Journal of War and Culture Studies, 5.3 (2012) 277-294
Full text 
33)Ian Dury : the definitive biography 
Will Birch  
(London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 2010)
 
34)Grace Kimmins and her Chailey heritage 
Ros Black  
(Haywards Heath, West Sussex: Arbe Publications, [2017])
 
35)Disability and Work during the Industrial Revolution in Britain 
Daniel Blackie  
in: The Oxford handbook of disability history, ed. by Michael A. Rembis, Catherine Jean Kudlick and Kim E. Nielsen, Oxford Handbooks Online (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 177-198.
Full text 
36)Disability in industrial Britain : a cultural and literary history of impairment in the coal industry, 1880-1948 
Kirsti Bohata  , Alexandra Jones  , Mike Mantin   & Steven Thompson  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020)
3 review(s)
Full text 
37)The madwoman and the blindman : Jane Eyre, discourse, disability 
ed. by David Bolt  , Julia Miele Rodas   & Elizabeth J. Donaldson  
(Columbus (OH): Ohio State University Press, 2012)
 
38)‘Fit to Work’ : The Talygarn Rehabilitation Centre 
Anne Borsay  
Llafur, 11.2 (2013) 154-156
 
39)From representation to experience : disability in the British advice literature for parents, 1890-1980 
Anne Borsay  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 87-101, 202-207.
 
40)Love and Limblessness : Male Heterosexuality, Disability, and the Great War 
Joanna Bourke  
Journal of War and Culture Studies, 9.1 (2016) 3-19
Full text 
41)Phantom Suffering : Amputees, Stump Pain, and Phantom Sensations in Modern Britain 
Joanna Bourke  
in: Pain and emotion in modern history, ed. by Rob Boddice (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014), pp. 66-89.
 
42)“A fiery hand gripped my vitals”: Admiral Nelson, amputation, and heroic masculinity in Jane Eyre 
Karen Bourrier  
in: Victorian hands : the manual turn in nineteenth-century body studies, ed. by Peter J. Capuano and Sue Zemka (Columbus (OH): Ohio State University Press, 2021), pp. [s.p.].
 
43)Victorian bestseller: the life of Dinah Craik 
Karen Bourrier  
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2019)
2 review(s)
 
44)The measure of manliness : disability and masculinity in the mid-Victorian novel 
Karen Bourrier  
Corporealities (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, [2015])
1 review(s)
 
45)Orthopaedic Disability and the Nineteenth-Century Novel 
Karen Bourrier  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 36.1 (2014) 1-17
Full text 
46)The role of Edward Harrison’s (1766-1838) disciples, Thomas Engall, John and George Epps, Charles Hoyland, John Evans Riadore, John Robinson and… 
Gary Bovine  , John Russell Silver   & Marie-France Weiner  
Journal of Medical Biography, 20.1 (2012) 18-24
Full text 
47)A medieval London hospital : Elsyngspital, 1330-1536 
Ann Bowtell  
(Thesis (Ph.D.) – University of London, [2010])
 
48)Loyal and true : the life and times of Alexander Drysdale (1812-1880) 
A. J. Boyce   & Pamela Bruce  
(Winsford: Deafprint Winsford, 2011)
 
49)Queercrip Temporality and the Representation of Disability in Lady Audley’s Secret 
Nolan Boyd  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 12.4 (2018) 407-422
Full text 
50)Peter the ‘Wild Boy’ : what Peter means to us 
Katie Branch  , Clemma Fleat  , Nicola Grove  , Tim Lumley Smith   & Robin Meader  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 148-161.
 
51)The 50 year diary of Burwood Park School Old Boys Association/Old Burwoodian Association, 1961-2010. 
British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2010)
 
52)History of the Edward Cup 
Sandy Brooks  , Robert J. Smith   & Deaf History Scotland (Organization)  
Deaf History Scotland publication, 1 ([Glasgow]: Deaf History Scotland, 2012)
 
53)Disability and Work in South Asia and the United Kingdom 
Jane Buckingham  
in: The Oxford handbook of disability history, ed. by Michael A. Rembis, Catherine Jean Kudlick and Kim E. Nielsen, Oxford Handbooks Online (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 197-212.
Full text 
54)“In no more danger of impediment than I am” : Two New Letters by John Thelwall 
John W. Bugg  
Romanticism, 16.2 (2010) 184-90
Full text 
55)Law and Mental Competency in Late Medieval England 
Eliza Buhrer  
Reading Medieval Studies, 40 (2014) 82-100
 
56)John Stubb’s left-handed letters 
Christopher Burlinson  
in: Cultures of correspondence in Early Modern Britain, ed. by James Daybell and Andrew Gordon, Material texts (Philadelphia (PA): University of Pennsylvania Press, 2016), pp. 156-168, 283-285.
 
57)Astley Cooper’s dramatically effective treatment of deafness 
Martin J. Burton  
Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 109.3 (2016) 117-118
Full text 
58)“Taken Weak in My Outward Man”: The Paradox of the Pathologized Female Prophet 
Alexis M. Butzner  
Early Modern Women, 13.1 (2018) 30-57
Full text 
59)Rethinking the monstrous : transgression, vulnerability and difference in British fiction since 1967 
Jim Byatt  
(Lanham: Lexington Books, [2015])
 
60)Disabling Pride in the Pricke of Conscience 
Michael Calabrese  
Chaucer Review, 53.4 (2018) 377-401
Full text 
61)Changing directions of the British welfare state 
ed. by Gideon Calder  , Jeremy Gass   & Kirsten Merrill-Glover  
(Cardiff: University of Wales Press, 2012)
 
62)Butterfly touch: rehabilitation, nature and the haptic arts in the First World War 
Ana Carden-Coyne  
Critical Military Studies, 6.2 (2020) 176-203
Full text 
63)Chronicler of the Front Line : Clutha Nantes Mackenzie 
Carolyn Carr  
in: Experience of a lifetime : people, personalities and leaders in the First World War, ed. by John Crawford, David Littlewood and James Watson (Auckland (NZ): Massey University Press, 2016), pp. 232-248.
 
64)“What Shall We Hear of This” : Understanding Judgment, Epilepsy in William Shakespeare’s Tragedies 
Roxana Cazan  
Neophilologus, 98.3 (2014) 503-516
Full text 
65)Institutional Ableism, Critical Actors and the Substantive Representation of Disabled People : Evidence from the UK Parliament 1940–2012 
Paul Chaney  
Journal of Legislative Studies, 21.2 (2015) 168-191
Full text 
66)Electoral Competition, Issue Salience and Public Policy for Disabled People: Westminster and Regional UK Elections 1945-2011 
Paul Chaney  
Parliamentary Affairs, 66.2 (2013) 364-383
Full text 
67)War and the mind : Ford Madox Ford’s Parade’s End, modernism, and psychology 
ed. by Ashley Chantler   & Rob Hawkes  
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, [2015])
 
68)Heterosexual Plots and Ill Narratives in Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice 
Hannah Chaskin  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 50 (2021) 313-318
Full text 
69)The Ethel Hedley Orthopaedic Hospital for Crippled Children, Calgarth Park, Windermere 
Paul Cheesbrough  
Transactions of the Cumberland & Westmorland Antiquarian & Archaeological Society, 3rd ser., 13 (2013) 215-231
 
70)Introduction: Disability in the Eighteenth Century 
Travis Chi Wing Lau   & Madeline Sutherland-Meier  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 50 (2021) 297-300
Full text 
71)‘The Greater and Grimmer Game’ : Sport as an Arbiter of Military Fitness in the British Empire – The Case of ‘One-Eyed’ Frank McGee 
Nic Clarke  
International Journal of the History of Sport, 28.3-4 (2011) 604-622
Full text 
72)FightingFit? Diet, Disease, and Disability in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, 1914–18 
Nic Clarke  , John Cranfield   & Kris E. Inwood  
War & Society [University of New South Wales], 33.2 (2014) 80-97
Full text 
73)Deafness : representation, sign language, and community, ca. 1800–1920 
Esme Cleall  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long nineteenth century, ed. by Joyce L. Huff and Martha Stoddard Holmes, Cultural history of disability, 5 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 95-112.
 
74)Missing Links 
Esme Cleall  
History Today, 69.2 (2019) 54-65
 
75)‘Children of silence’: disability, childhood and Christian suffering in nineteenth-century Britain 
Esme Cleall  
in: Creating religious childhoods in Anglo-world and British colonial contexts, 1800-1950, ed. by Hugh Douglas Morrison and Mary Clare Martin, Ashgate studies in childhood, 1700 to the present (Abingdon, Oxfordshire: Routledge, 2017), .
 
76)Jane Groom and the Deaf Colonists : Empire, Emigration and the Agency of Disabled People in the late Nineteenth-Century British Empire 
Esme Cleall  
History Workshop Journal, 81.1 (2016) 39-61
Full text 
77)Deaf Connections and Global Conversations : Deafness and education in and beyond the British Empire, ca. 1800-1900 
Esme Cleall  
Journal of Colonialism and Colonial History, 16.1 (2015)
Full text 
78)Orientalising deafness: race and disability in imperial Britain 
Esme Cleall  
Social Identities, 21.1 (2015) 22-36
Full text 
79)Silencing Deafness: Displacing Disability in the Nineteenth Century 
Esme Cleall  
PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, 12.1 (2015) 1-16
Full text 
80)‘Deaf to the Word’ : Gender, Deafness and Protestantism in Nineteenth-Century Britain and Ireland 
Esme Cleall  
Gender & History, 25.3 (2013) 590-603
Full text 
81)Proportionate Maiming: The Origins of Thomas Jefferson’s Provisions for Facial Disfigurement in Bill 64 
Emily Cock  
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 29 (2019) 127-151
Full text 
82)Speech: The Sound of Disability 
Dwight Codr   & Jared S. Richman  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 105-120.
Full text 
83)Family secrets : shame and privacy in modern Britain 
Deborah Cohen  
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013)
 
84)Blindness and Creativity in Romney’s Milton and His Daughters 
Georgina Cole  
Art History, 43.1 (2020) 176-199
Full text 
85)Painting for the blind : Nathaniel Hone’s portraits of Sir John Fielding 
Georgina Cole  
Intellectual History Review, 27.3 (2017) 351-376
Full text 
86)Disability and Madness in Colonial Asylum Records in Australia and New Zealand 
Catharine Coleborne  
in: The Oxford handbook of disability history, ed. by Michael A. Rembis, Catherine Jean Kudlick and Kim E. Nielsen, Oxford Handbooks Online (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 281-292.
Full text 
87)Synge on vagrancy: labour, workhouses and the feeble-minded 
Christopher Collins  
Irish Studies Review, 28.4 (2020) 411-428
Full text 
88)A fear of flying : diagnosing traumatic neurosis among British aviators of the Great War 
Michael D. Collins  
First World War Studies, 6.2 (2015) 187-202
Full text 
89)Deaf women of Ireland (1922-1994) 
Anne Coogan  
CDS/SLSCS monograph (Dublin: Centre for Deaf Studies, Trinity College Dublin, [2018])
 
90)Chronic Pain and Illness: Enlightenment and Romantic Responses 
Isabella Cooper  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 57-72.
Full text 
91)Reading through deafness : Francis Galton and the strange science of psychophysics 
Danielle Coriale  
in: Strange science : investigating the limits of knowledge in the Victorian Age, ed. by Lara Pauline Karpenko and Shalyn Claggett (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, [2017]), pp. 105-124.
 
92)The life of John Cotterell 
John Cotterell  
(Milton Keynes: AuthorHouse UK, 2020)
 
93)Printing Emma Corbett : Revolutionary Violence and the Prosthetics of Typography 
Daniel Diez Couch  
The Eighteenth Century [Lubbock], 59.4 (2018) 449-469
Full text 
94)Teaching language to a boy born deaf : the Popham notebook and associated texts 
David Cram   & Jaap Maat  
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017)
1 review(s)
Full text 
95)Differentiation in the Later Anglo-Saxon Burial Ritual on the Basis of Mental or Physical Impairment : a Documentary Perspective 
Sally Crawford  
in: Burial in later Anglo-Saxon England, c.650-1100 AD, ed. by Jo Buckberry and Annia Cherryson (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2010), pp. 93-102.
 
96)Spectacular Medical Freakery : British “Translations” of Nineteenth Century European Teratology 
Ally Crockford  
in: Exploring the cultural history of continental European freak shows and ‘enfreakment’, ed. by Anna Kerchy and Andrea Zittlau (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2012), pp. 112-128.
 
97)Anzac legacies : Australians and the aftermath of war 
ed. by Martin Crotty   & Marina Larsson  
(North Melbourne, Vic: Australian Scholarly Publishing, 2010)
 
98)Adding Insult to Injury : The Case of Frank Eaves, a Disabled Miner 
Ben Curtis  
Llafur, 11.2 (2013) 148-153
 
99)Disability and the Family in South Wales Coalfield Society, c.1920–1939 
Ben Curtis   & Steven Thompson  
Family & Community History, 20.1 (2017) 25-44
Full text 
100)‘This is the country of premature old men’ Ageing and Aged Miners in the South Wales Coalfield, c.1880–1947 
Ben Curtis   & Steven Thompson  
Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 12.4 (2015) 587-606
Full text 
101)‘A Plentiful Crop of Cripples Made by All This Progress’ : Disability, Artificial Limbs and Working-Class Mutualism in the South Wales Coalfield,… 
Ben Curtis   & Steven Thompson  
Social History of Medicine, 27.4 (2014) 708-727
Full text 
102)‘A hand for the one-handed’: user-inventors and the market for assistive technologies in early nineteenth-century Britain 
Laurel Daen  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 93-113.
 
103)Goldilocks or Granny? : Portrayals of deafness in the English novel 
paul Dakin  
Journal of Medical Biography, 23.4 (2015) 227-237
Full text 
104)Health visiting and disability issues in England before 1948 
Pamela Dale  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), .
 
105)Samuel Johnson and the frailties of speech 
Laura Davies  
in: Literature, speech disorders, and disability : talking normal, ed. by Christopher Eagle, Routledge interdisciplinary perspectives on literature, 20 (London: Routledge, 2014), pp. 44-64.
 
106)“The Oddest Man that I Ever Saw” : Assessing Cognitive Disability on Eighteenth-Century Cape Cod 
Cornelia Hughes Dayton  
Journal of Social History, 49.1 (2015) 77-99
 
107)Alisoun’s Aging, Hearing-Impaired Female Body : Gazing at the Wife of Bath in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales 
Mikee Delony  
in: The treatment of disabled persons in Medieval Europe : examining disability in the historical, legal, literary, medical, and religious discourse of the middle ages, ed. by Wendy J. Turner and Tory Vandeventer Pearman (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010), pp. 313-346.
 
108)The Male Body, Beauty and Aesthetics in Modern British Culture 
Paul R. Deslandes  
History Compass, 8.10 (2010) 1191-208
Full text 
109)Deformity Poems and Other Nasties 
Simon Dickie  
Eighteenth-century Life, 41.1 (2017) 197-230
Full text 
110)Cruelty and laughter : forgotten comic literature and the unsentimental eighteenth century 
Simon Dickie  
(Chicago (IL); London: Chicago University Press, 2011)
 
111)‘Weighty Celebrity’: Corpulency, Monstrosity, and Freakery in Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century England 
Whitney Dirks  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 39.3 (2019)
Full text 
112)Lives of Deprivation or Lives of Industry : Possible Cerebral Palsy on the Mary Rose 
Rose Drew  
The Medieval History Journal, 18.1 (2015) 25-45
Full text 
113)John Thelwall’s Elocutionary Practices 
Judith F. Duchan  
Romanticism, 16.2 (2010) 191-96
Full text 
114)“Skinless Wonders” : Body Worlds and the Victorian Freak Show 
Nadja Durbach  
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 69.1 (2014) 38-67
Full text 
115)Wilkie Collins’s blue period : Color, aesthetics, and race in Poor Miss Finch 
Jessica Durgan  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 43.4 (2015) 765-783
Full text 
116)Dr. Langdon Down’s Normansfield Theatre 
John Earl  , Borough of Twickenham Local History Society   & Down’s Syndrome Association (Great Britain)  
Borough of Twickenham Local History Society occasional paper, 6 ([Twickenham]: Borough of Twickenham Local History Society, 2010)
 
117)Witchcraft and deformity in early modern English literature 
Scott Eaton  
Seventeenth Century, 35.6 (2020) 815-828
Full text 
118)Reorienting the Bildungsroman: Progress Narratives, Queerness, and Disability in The History of Sir Richard Calmady and Jude the Obscure 
Jill Ehnenn  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 11.2 (2017) [s.p.]
Full text 
119)Far beyond our dreams : 50 years of leading the way. 
ENABLE Scotland (Organization)  
1 vol. (unpaged) (Glasgow: ENABLE, 2010)
 
120)Literature and intellectual disability in early modern England : folly, law and medicine, 1500-1640  
Alice Equestri  
Routledge studies in Renaissance literature and culture (London: Routledge, 2021)
 
121)Phyllis Monk: a pragmatic revolutionary in charge of a school for ‘girls with little or no sight’ 
Jeanette Normanton Erry  
History of Education, 50.3 (2021) 359-377
Full text 
122)Reading Victorian deafness : signs and sounds in Victorian literature and culture 
Jennifer Esmail  
Series in Victorian studies (Athens: Ohio University Press, [2013])
 
123)The metamorphosis of autism : a history of child development in Britain 
Bonnie Evans  
Social histories of medicine (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017)
1 review(s)
 
124)How autism became autism : The radical transformation of a central concept of child development in Britain 
Bonnie Evans  
History of the Human Sciences, 26.3 (2013) 3-31
Full text 
125)Disability as Metaphor and Lived Experience in Samuel Richardson’s Pamela and Sarah Scott’s Millenium Hall 
Jason S. Farr  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 50 (2021) 309-312
Full text 
126)Novel bodies : disability and sexuality in eighteenth-century British literature 
Jason S. Farr  
Transits: literature, thought & culture 1650-1850 (Lewisburg (PA): Bucknell University Press, 2019)
1 review(s)
 
127)Libertine Sexuality and Queer-Crip Embodiment in Eighteenth-Century Britain 
Jason S. Farr  
Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, 16.4 (2016) 96-118
Full text 
128)Sharp Minds / Twisted Bodies : Intellect, Disability, and Female Education in Frances Burney’s Camilla 
Jason S. Farr  
The Eighteenth Century [Lubbock], 55.1 (2014) 1-17
Full text 
129)“A forgotten generation”: medical care for disabled veterans of the First World War in independent Ireland 
Anthony Farrell  
Irish Studies Review, 29.2 (2021) 142-155
Full text 
130)Stephen Hawking : a life well lived : the story and science of one of the most extraordinary, celebrated and courageous figures of our time 
Kitty Ferguson  
(London: Black Swan, 2019)
 
131)“Does every traveller see all that he describes?” O viajante cego James Holman e os Limites do Olhar Viajante [“Does every traveller see all that… 
Amilcar Torrão Filho  
Revista de história [São Paulo], 175.2 (2016) 319-348
Full text 
132)John Milton’s Poetic Translation of Clement of Rome in Sonnet 19 
Benjamin L. Fischer  
Notes and Queries, 64.3 (2017) 423-427
Full text 
133)Deafness of the mind : the forgotten children of Boston Spa 
Kevin Fitzgerald  
(Manchester: Kevin Fitzgerald, 2010)
 
134)‘Fear of Giving Offence Makes Me Give the More Offence’ : Politeness, Speech and Its Impediments in British Society, c.1660–1800 
Elizabeth A. Foyster  
Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 15.4 (2018) 487-508
Full text 
135)Accommodating “Imbeciles” or the “Weak-Minded”: Justice and Sexual Crime in Nineteenth-Century Scotland 
Elizabeth A. Foyster   & Christopher Holligan  
Crime, Histoire et Sociétés, 24.1 (2020) 91-113
Full text 
136)“Perhaps John Lyly was a trans woman?”: An Interview about performing Galatea‘s Queer, Transgender Stories  
Emma Frankland   & Andy Kesson  
Journal for Early Modern Cultural Studies, 19.4 (2019) 284-298
Full text 
137)Disability Panic: The Making of the Normal School Teacher 
Jonathan Franklin  
Victorian Studies, 62.4 (2020) 644-667
Full text 
138)‘Lame and Blind’ : A Stage Emblem in The Shoemaker’s Holiday 
Paul J. C. M. Franssen  
Notes and Queries, 59.4 (2012) 557-559
Full text 
139)Deformity, Life Writing, and the Overcoming Narrative 
D. Christopher Gabbard  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 50 (2021) 301-307
Full text 
140)‘A defect in the mind’ : cognitive ableism in Swift’s Gulliver’s Travels 
D. Christopher Gabbard  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 104-127.
 
141)The Freak Show’s ‘Missing Links’ : Krao Farini and the Pleasures of Archiving Prehistory 
Ann Garascia  
Journal of Victorian Culture, 21.4 (2016) 433-455
Full text 
142)A Dialogue between the Deaf and the Dumb : Aesthetic Theories in England and Italy during the Eighteenth Century 
Andrea Gatti  
in: Britain and Italy in the long eighteenth century : literary and art theories, ed. by Rosamaria Loretelli and Frank O’Gorman (Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2010), pp. 49-59.
 
143)Gueules Cassées : The Men Behind the Masks 
Marjorie Gehrhardt  
Journal of War and Culture Studies, 6.4 (2013) 267-281
Full text 
144)A Blind Perthshire Sergeant’s Lament for his Colonel who Died at El Hamet in 1807 
John G. Gibson  
International Review of Scottish Studies, 36 (2011) 93-106
 
145)Purchase, use and adaptation: interpreting ‘patented’ aids to the deaf in Victorian Britain 
Graeme Gooday   & Karen Sayer  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 27-47.
 
146)Managing the experience of hearing loss in Britain, 1830-1930 
Graeme Gooday   & Karen Sayer  
Palgrave pivot (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017)
4 review(s)
 
147)Exclusion from the eucharist : the re-shaping of idiocy in the seventeenth-century church 
C. F. Goodey  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 80-103.
 
148)Plotting disability in the nineteenth-century novel 
Clare Walker Gore  
Edinburgh critical studies in Victorian culture (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2020)
2 review(s)
 
149)“The additional attraction of affliction” : disability, sex, and genre trouble in Barchester Towers 
Clare Walker Gore  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 45.3 (2017) 629-643
Full text 
150)Noble Lives : Writing Disability and Masculinity in the Late Nineteenth Century 
Clare Walker Gore  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 36.4 (2014) 363-375
Full text 
151)“Unaccomodated Man”: Dismodernism and Disability Justice in King Lear 
Christine M. Gottlieb  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 38.4 (2018) [s.p.]
Full text 
152)Legs and the Man : The History of a Medieval Motif 
Richard Firth Green  
in: The medieval Python : the purposive and provocative work of Terry Jones, ed. by Robert F. Yeager, Toshiyuki Takamiya and Terry Jones, The new Middle Ages (New York; Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2012), pp. 181-193.
 
153)Disability and Work in British West Africa 
Jeff D. Grischow  
in: The Oxford handbook of disability history, ed. by Michael A. Rembis, Catherine Jean Kudlick and Kim E. Nielsen, Oxford Handbooks Online (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 213-238.
Full text 
154)Welfare for the Wounded 
Eric Gruber von Arni   & Andrew Hopper  
History Today, 66.7 (2016) 47-53
 
155)Memoirs of Sight Loss from Post-Independence Ireland 
Elizabeth Grubgeld  
Irish University Review, 47.2 (2017) 266-280
Full text 
156)Gulliver in the land of giants : a critical biography and the memoirs of the celebrated dwarf Joseph Boruwlaski 
Anna Grześkowiak-Krwawicz  
(Farnham: Ashgate, 2012)
 
157)The Ideologies of Designing for Disability  
Elizabeth E. Guffey  
in: Making disability modern : design histories, ed. by Bess Williamson and Elizabeth E. Guffey (London; New York: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2020), pp. 77-94.
Full text 
158)Gender, Work and Social Control: A Century of Disability Benefits 
Jackie Gulland  
Palgrave socio-legal studies (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019)
1 review(s)
Full text 
159)Insulting Jean Massieu : Debating Representational Control of Deaf People in Mid-Nineteenth Century Britain 
Mike Gulliver  
Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 14.3 (2017) 321-342
Full text 
160)Disability and the welfare state in Britain : changes in perception and policy 1948-1979 
Jameel Hampton  
(Bristol: Policy Press, 2016)
1 review(s)
 
161)Discovering Disability : The General Classes of Disabled People and the Classic Welfare State, 1948–1964 
Jameel Hampton  
The Historian [Albuquerque, NM etc.], 75.1 (2013) 69-93
Full text 
162)Eugenics, literature, and culture in post-war Britain 
Clare Hanson  
Routledge interdisciplinary perspectives on literature, 11 (New York: Routledge, 2013)
 
163)Music, Text, Stuttering: An Intermedial Approach to Dramatick Opera in The Fairy Queen 
Sharon J. Harris  
Restoration: Studies in English Literary Culture, 1660-1700, 42.2 (2018) 65-94
Full text 
164)Sterilization and the British Conservative party : rethinking the failure of the Eugenics Society’s political strategy in the nineteen-thirties 
Bradley W. Hart   & Richard Carr  
Historical Research, 88.242 (2015) 716-739
Full text 
165)Prosthesis: From Grammar to Medicine in the Earliest History of the Word 
Brandon W. Hawk  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 38.4 (2018) [s.p.]
Full text 
166)Structural boundaries that effect the representation of gender and disability in works of fiction from the United States and United Kingdom 
Lesley Hawkes   & Sarah Kanake  
Gender, Place and Culture, 26.10 (2019) 1459-1471
Full text 
167)Did drunkenness dim the sight? Medieval understandings and responses to blindness in medical and religious discourse 
Joy Hawkins  
in: Medicine, religion and gender in medieval culture, ed. by Naoë Kukita Yoshikawa, Gender in the Middle Ages (Cambridge: D. S. Brewer, 2015), pp. 203-220.
 
168)Seeing the Light? Blindness and Sanctity in Later Medieval England 
Joy Hawkins  
Studies in Church History, 47 (2011) 148-158
 
169)Philosophy as disability & exclusion : the development of theories on blindness, touch and the arts in England, 1688-2010 
Simon Hayhoe  
(Charlotte: Information Age Publishing, 2016)
 
170)The epistemological model of disability, and its role in understanding passive exclusion in eighteenth and nineteenth century Protestant… 
Simon Hayhoe  
International Journal of Christianity & Education, 20.1 (2016) 49-66
Full text 
171)The Philosophical, Political and Religious Roots of Touch Exhibitions in 20th Century British Museums 
Simon Hayhoe  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 33.3 (2013) [s.p.]
Full text 
172)The life & times of Miss Taylor 
J. Hearn  
([England]: J Hearn, [2012])
 
173)Paralympic assemblages globalizing International Relations: an autoethnographic account of global politics at the Paralympic Games  
Andrew Heffernan  
Sport in Society, 25.1 (2022) 56-69
Full text 
174)The Fiction of Blindness and Real Life : The Diary Portion of Henry Green’s Blindness (1926) 
Marius Hentea  
Notes and Queries, 59.3 (2012) 421-424
Full text 
175)A Painfully “Nice Family” : Reconstructing Interdependence in Wilkie Collins’s The Law and the Lady 
Rachel Herzl-Betz  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 9.1 (2015) 35-51
Full text 
176)The Lexical Prison : Impairment and Confinement in Medieval and Early Modern England 
Helen M. Hickey  
Parergon, 34.2 (2017) 133-157
Full text 
177)Articulating bodies : the narrative form of disability and illness in Victorian fiction 
Kylee-Anne Hingston  
Representations. Health, disability, culture and society, 8 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2019)
2 review(s)
 
178)Recovering disability in early modern England 
ed. by Allison P. Hobgood   & David Houston Wood  
(Columbus (OH): Ohio State University Press, 2013)
 
179)Best foot forward : the autobiography of the RAF’s other legless fighter pilot 
Colin Hodgkinson  
(Barnsley, S. Yorkshire: Frontline Books, 2017)
 
180)Heel and toe! 
John Hollingsworth  
(Ilfracombe, Devon: Arthur H Stockwell Ltd, 2013)
 
181)The Relief of English Disabled Ex-Sailors, c. 1590–1680 
Geoffrey L. Hudson  
in: The social history of English seamen, 1485-1649, ed. by Cheryl A. Fury (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2012), pp. 229-252.
 
182)‘These Valuable Institutions’ : Educating Blind and Deaf Children in Victorian and Edwardian Swansea 
Lesley Hulonce  
Welsh History Review, 27.2 (2014) 310-337
 
183)No Limits : The Disabled People’s Movement : A radical history 
Judy Hunt  
(Manchester: TBR Imprint, 2019)
 
184)Between fitness and death : disability and slavery in the Caribbean 
Stefanie Hunt-Kennedy  
Disability histories (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2020)
2 review(s)
 
185)‘Had his nose cropt for being formerly runaway’: disability and the bodies of fugitive slaves in the British Caribbean 
Stefanie Hunt-Kennedy  
Slavery & Abolition, 41.2 (2020) 212-233
Full text 
186)Accepted and Rejected: Late Nineteenth-Century Application for Admission to the Scottish National Institution for the Education of Imbecile Children  
Iain Hutchison  
in: Voices in the history of madness : personal and professional perspectives on mental health and illness, ed. by Rob Ellis, Sarah Kendal and Steven J. Taylor, Mental health in historical perspective (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2021), pp. 25-48.
Full text 
187)Discharge, Disposal, and Death: Outcomes for Child Inmates of the Scottish National Institution, Larbert, and Stanley Hall, Wakefield, to 1913 
Iain Hutchison  
Journal of Family History, 45.2 (2020) 207-227
Full text 
188)The Value of Flawed Source: The Register of the Missions to Outdoor Blind for Edinburgh, the Borders and the Lothians, c.1903-10 
Iain Hutchison  
Scottish Archives, 22 (2016) 99-117
 
189)Institutionalization of mentally-impaired children in Scotland, c.1855-1914 
Iain Hutchison  
History of Psychiatry, 22.4 (2011) 416-433
Full text 
190)Feeling our history : the experience of blindness and sight loss in Edwardian Edinburgh, the Lothians and the Scottish Borders 
Iain Hutchison   & RNIB Scotland  
(Edinburgh: RNIB Scotland, 2015)
 
191)Hearing our history : RNIB Scotland research volunteers discuss the experience of blindness and sight loss in Edwardian Edinburgh, the Lothians… 
Iain Hutchison   & RNIB Scotland  
(Edinburgh: RNIB Scotland, 2015)
 
192)Stage Hands : Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus and the Agency of the Disabled Body in Text and Performance 
Nicola Imbracsio  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 6.3 (2012) 291-306
Full text 
193)Alexander Popham’s notebook : a 17th-century education of a deaf boy 
Peter Webster Jackson   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society Publications, ©2012)
 
194)Nightingale Lane : the story of three London deaf schools 
Peter Webster Jackson   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2010)
 
195)Dorothy Miles : Her Life and Poems 
Peter Webster Jackson  
(Warrington: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2018)
 
196)The origins of the British Deaf Association 
Peter Webster Jackson  , Raymond Lee   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2010)
 
197)Karl Koenig : the Austrian refugee doctor who founded a worldwide movement in Scotland 
Robin Jackson  
Scottish Medical Journal, 58.2 (2013) 124-127
Full text 
198)Consciousness reduced: The role of the ‘idiot’ in early evolutionary psychology 
Simon Jarrett  
History of the Human Sciences, 33.5 (2020) 110-137
Full text 
199)Those they called idiots : the idea of the disabled mind from 1700 to the present day 
Simon Jarrett  
(London: Reaktion, 2020)
5 review(s)
 
200)‘Belief’, ‘opinion’, and ‘knowledge’ : the idiot in law in the long eighteenth century 
Simon Jarrett  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 162-189.
 
201)Learning Difficulties: Intellectual Disability in the Long Eighteenth Century 
Simon Jarrett   & C. F. Goodey  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 121-138.
Full text 
202)The history of the East Anglian School for Deaf and Blind Children 
Maurice Joel  , Fred Riley   & Dee Riley  
(Great Yarmouth, Norfolk: CompugraF, 2013)
 
203)In the Bursting of an Eye : Blinding and Blindness in Ireland’s Medieval Hagiography 
Máire Johnson  
in: Wounds and wound repair in medieval culture, ed. by Larissa Tracy and Kelly DeVries, Explorations in medieval culture, 1 (Leiden: Brill, 2015), pp. 448-471.
Full text 
204)‘Her body [was] like a hard-worked machine’: Women’s work and disability in coalfields literature, 1880-1950 
Alexandra Jones  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 37.4 (2017) [s.p.]
Full text 
205)Disability in Herefordshire, 1851-1911 
Christine Jones  
Local Population Studies, 87 (2011) 29-44
 
206)Modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures: an introduction 
Claire L. Jones  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 1-24.
 
207)Washington Allston’s Christ Healing the Sick: disability, history painting, and narrative time 
Nicholas Junkerman  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 42.3 (2020) 313-334
Full text 
208)The National Diamond Factory: the rehabilitation of Great War amputees in Brighton (1917-1924)  
Jaime Kaminski  
Sussex Archaeological Collections, 158 (2021 for 2020) 215-232
 
209)“Printed Words That Gave . . . Pain” : Embodied Response and Deformito-Mania in The Old Curiosity Shop 
Lara Pauline Karpenko  
Nineteenth Century Studies, 24 (2010) 17-33
 
210)Rochester’s Libertinism and the Pleasure of Debility 
Declan William Kavanagh  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 50 (2021) 319-324
Full text 
211)The Man Within the Breast : Sympathy and Deformity in Adam Smith’s The Theory of Moral Sentiments 
Paul Kelleher  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 44 (2015) 41-60
 
212)Mr Foote’s other leg 
Ian Kelly  
(London: Picador, 2012)
 
213)‘Let them be young and stoutly set in limbs’: race, labor, and disability in the British Atlantic World 
Stefanie Kennedy  
Social Identities, 21.1 (2015) 37-52
Full text 
214)Lost hands and prosthetic narratives: William Dodd, writing at the industrial join 
Tamara Siroone Ketabgian  
in: Victorian hands : the manual turn in nineteenth-century body studies, ed. by Peter J. Capuano and Sue Zemka (Columbus (OH): Ohio State University Press, 2021), pp. [s.p.].
 
215)A ‘forgettable minority’? Psychiatric Institutions and the Intellectually Disabled in Ireland, 1965–84  
David Kilgannon  
Social History of Medicine, 34.3 (2021) 808-827
Full text 
216)Constructing the Disabled Child in England, 1800–1860 
Steven King  
Family & Community History, 18.2 (2015) 104-121
Full text 
217)Literacy, Advocacy and Agency: The Campaign for Political Recognition of Dyslexia in Britain (1962–1997) 
Philip Kirby  
Social History of Medicine, 33.4 (2020) 1306-1326
Full text 
218)Worried mothers? Gender, class and the origins of the ‘dyslexia myth’ 
Philip Kirby  
Oral History, 47.1 (2019) 92-104
Full text 
219)Aberrations in the Body and in the Body Politic: The Eighteenth-Century Life of Benjamin Lay, Disabled Abolitionist 
Nathaniel Kogan  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 36.3 (2016) [s.p.]
Full text 
220)Disability Humour in English Jestbooks of the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries 
Anu Korhonen  
Cultural History, 3.1 (2014) 27-53
Full text 
221)The Eyes Have It : Blindness and Vision in Matthew Paris’s Estoire de seint Aedward le rei 
Nicole Leapley  
Mirator, 12 (2011) 30-53
 
222)Painted with pride : the forgotten story of how one woman taught the broken men of WWI to live again 
Malcolm Leary  
(Great Britain: Malcolm Leary, 2016)
 
223)From High Street to High School : the education of the deaf in Hull, 1853 to 1996 
Paul Leaver   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham, Middlesex: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2013)
 
224)Abled, Disabled, Enabled : An Attempt to Define Disability in Anglo-Saxon England 
Christina Lee  
WerkstattGeschichte, 65 (2015) 41-54
 
225)Disability [A handbook of Anglo-Saxon studies] 
Christina Lee  
in: A handbook of Anglo-Saxon studies, ed. by Jacqueline A. Stodnick and Renée Rebecca Trilling, Cultural theory handbooks (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012), pp. 23-38.
 
226)Body and Soul : Disease and Impairment 
Christina Lee  
in: The material culture of daily living in the Anglo-Saxon world, ed. by Maren Clegg Hyer and Gale R. Owen-Crocker (Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 2011), pp. 293-309, 363-367.
 
227)Body Talks : Disease and Disability in Anglo-Saxon England 
Christina Lee  
in: Anglo-Saxon traces, ed. by Jane Roberts and Leslie Webster, Medieval and Renaissance Texts and Studies, 405 – Essays in Anglo-Saxon studies, 4 (Tempe (AZ): ACMRS (Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies), 2011), pp. 145-164.
 
228)Blindness, abuse and influence within a late nineteenth century inquiry 
Fiona Lee Davis  
Women’s History Review, 28.4 (2019) 607-625
Full text 
229)Charles Shirreff : 1749-1829 
Raymond Lee  
Notable deaf persons, 6 (Feltham, Middlesex: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2015)
 
230)Braidwood &c. 
Raymond Lee   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham, Middlesex: British Deaf History Society Publications, [2015])
 
231)Walter Geikie : 1795-1837 
Raymond Lee   & British Deaf History Society  
Notable deaf persons, 1 (Feltham, Middlesex: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2015)
 
232)L’égalité des droits à l’éducation en Angleterre : mythe ou réalité ? [Equal Rights for Disabled Children in England: Myth or Reality?] 
Yvette Léon-Aubert  
La revue LISA, 12.7 (2014)
 
233)Deafness: Language and Personhood in the Enlightenment 
Kristin Lindgren  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 87-104.
Full text 
234)All the King’s Fools 
Suzannah Lipscomb  
History Today, 61.8 (2011) 6-7
 
235)Sensational deviance : disability in nineteenth-century sensation fiction 
Heidi Logan  
Routledge studies in nineteenth-century literature, 39 (London: Routledge, 2018)
Full text 
236)The King’s war: the friendship of George VI and Lionel Logue during World War II 
Mark Logue  
(New York: Pegasus Books, 2019)
 
237)Early modern theatre and the figure of disability 
Genevieve Love  
Arden studies in early modern drama (London: The Arden Shakespeare, 2019)
1 review(s)
 
238)“The Poor Little Monstrosity” : Ellice Hopkins’ Rose Turquand, Victorian Disability, and Nascent Eugenic Fiction 
Oliver Lovesey  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 35.3 (2013) 275-296
Full text 
239)Prenatal diagnosis : The irresistible rise of the ‘visible fetus’ 
Ilana Löwy  
Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences, 47 (2014) 290-299
Full text 
240)Losing Sight : War, Authority, and Blindness in British and American Visual Cultures, 1914–22 
David M. Lubin  
Art History, 34.4 (2011) 796-817
Full text 
241)‘Strange and deformed births’ in Hobbes’s civil science 
Jared Lucky  
History of Political Thought, 37.4 (2016) 630-657
 
242)A ‘Somewhat Eccentric Preacher’; the Reverend Richard Hale of Harewood 
Karen Lynch  
Yorkshire Archaeological Journal, 87 (2015) 124-144
Full text 
243)The Woman’s Body as Compensation for the Disabled First World War Soldier 
Kate Macdonald  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 10.1 (2016) 53-70
Full text 
244)The war-wounded and the congenitally impaired : Competing categories of disability in John Buchan’s Huntingtower (1922) 
Kate Macdonald  
Journal of War and Culture Studies, 4.1 (2011) 7-20
Full text 
245)Bader’s war : “have a go at everything” 
S. P. MacKenzie  
(Stroud: Spellmount, 2010)
 
246)“Transitory Hieroglyphiques” : Deaf People and Signed Communication in Early Modern Theories of Language 
Susannah Macready  
in: Word and self estranged in English texts, 1550-1660, ed. by Philippa Kelly and L. E. Semler (Farnham: Ashgate, 2010), pp. 205-218.
 
247)Paralympic protest: athlete activism, apartheid South Africa, and the international sport boycott in British para sport, 1979–1981  
Cam Mallett   & Michelle M. Sikes  
Sport in History, 42.3 (2022) 347-365
Full text 
248)A job fit for heroes? Disabled veterans, the Arts and Crafts Movement and social reconstruction in post-World War I Britain 
Carolyn Malone  
First World War Studies, 4.2 (2013) 201-217
Full text 
249)‘The business of life’ : educating Catholic deaf children in late nineteenth-century England 
Carmen M. Mangion  
History of Education, 41.5 (2012) 575-594
Full text 
250)Objects and Objectivity : Harriet Martineau as nineteenth-century Cyborg 
Abigail Mann   & Kathleen Béres Rogers  
Prose Studies, 33.2 (2011) 241-256
Full text 
251)Coalmining and the National Scheme for Disabled Ex-Servicemen after the First World War 
Mike Mantin  
Social History [London], 41.2 (2016) 155-170
Full text 
252)Philanthropy and Deafness in Wales, 1847-1914 
Mike Mantin  
Welsh History Review, 27.2 (2014) 282-309
 
253)The question of oralism and the experiences of deaf children, 1880-1914 
Mike Mantin  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 59-71.
 
254)The Ineluctable Modality of the Visibly Disabled in James Joyce’s Ulysses 
Paul Marchbanks  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 12.1 (2018) 53-69
Full text 
255)A Costly Morality: Dependency Care and Mental Difference in the Novels of the Brontë Sisters 
Paul Marchbanks  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 4.1 (2010) 55-72
Full text 
256)Disabled Children and Domestic Living Spaces in Britain, 1800-1900 
Mary Clare Martin  
in: Children, spaces and identity, ed. by Eva Alarcón García, Gonzalo Aranda Jiménez and Margarita Sánchez Romero, Childhood in the past monograph (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2015), pp. 136-154.
 
257)Itinerant Drúith and the Mark of Cain in O’Davoren’s Glossary 
Anna Matheson  
Cambrian Medieval Celtic Studies, 67 (2014) 55-71
 
258)“So that they may be usefull to themselves and the community” : Charting Childhood Disability in an Eighteenth-Century Institution 
Ashley Mathisen  
Journal of the History of Childhood and Youth, 8.2 (2015) 191-210
Full text 
259)‘Natural Pantomime’ : Spectacle, Silence and Speech Disability 
Kate Mattacks  
Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film, 37.1 (2010) 33-44
 
260)‘The work of masculine fingers’: the Disabled Soldiers’ Embroidery Industry, 1918–1955 
Joseph McBrinn  
Journal of Design History, 31.1 (2018) 1-23
Full text 
261)Queer Hobbies: Ernest Thesiger and Interwar Embroidery 
Joseph McBrinn  
Textile, 15.3 (2017) 292-323
Full text 
262)‘The last of the shanachies’ and the professor 
Ciarán McCabe  
History Ireland, 27.2 (2019) 20-23
Full text 
263)Visiting Earlswood : the asylum travelogue and the shaping of ‘idiocy’ 
Patrick McDonagh  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 211-237.
 
264)Introduction : the emergent critical history of intellectual disability 
Patrick McDonagh  , C. F. Goodey   & Timothy Stainton  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 1-25.
 
265)Measuring difference, numbering normal : setting the standards for disability in the interwar period 
Coreen Anne McGuire  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020)
1 review(s)
Full text 
266)The categorisation of hearing loss through telephony in inter-war Britain 
Coreen Anne McGuire  
History and Technology, 35.2 (2019) 138-155
Full text 
267)Inventing amplified telephony: the co-creation of aural technology and disability 
Coreen Anne McGuire  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 70-90.
 
268)Working lives : work in Britain since 1945 
Arthur McIvor  
(Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2013)
 
269)Sexual and Economic Constructions of Women’s Lameness in the Norwich Poor Census 
Kaye McLelland  
Early Modern Women, 15.1 (2020) 95-106
Full text 
270)The Sorrow of Soreness : Infirmity and Suicide in Medieval England 
Rebecca F. McNamara  
Parergon, 31.2 (2014) 11-34
 
271)The Empire’s Patriotic Fund : public benevolence and the Boer War in an Australian colony 
John McQuilton  
(Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017)
1 review(s)
 
272)The Extremity of Illness: Mary Sidney, Early Modern Women’s Chronic Illness, and Disability Studies 
Catherine Medici  
Early Modern Women, 15.1 (2020) 107-118
Full text 
273)The life of John Metcalf : commonly called Blind Jack of Knaresborough 
John Metcalf  
Cambridge library collection. Technology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017)
 
274)Fools and idiots? : intellectual disability in the Middle Ages 
Irina Metzler  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018)
1 review(s)
 
275)Wounded in a mentionable place: The (in)visibility of the disabled ex-serviceman in interwar Britain 
Jessica Meyer  
in: Veterans of the First World War : ex-servicemen and ex-servicewomen in post-war Britain and Ireland, ed. by David Swift and Oliver Wilkinson, Routledge studies in First World War history (London: Routledge, 2019), pp. 158-171.
Full text 
276)Other amputee officers in Nelson’s navy 
Teresa Michals  
Journal for Maritime Research, 23.1 (2021) 19-49
Full text 
277)Invisible Amputation and Heroic Masculinity 
Teresa Michals  
Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture, 44 (2015) 17-39
 
278)Dis/enabling Courtesy and Chivalry in the Middle English and Early Modern Gawain Romances and Ballads 
Bonnie Millar  
in: Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present, ed. by Patricia Skinner and Emily Cock, Facialities (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018), pp. 11-25.
Full text 
279)Disability 
Simon Millar  
in: Unequal Britain : equalities in Britain since 1945, ed. by Pat Thane (London: Continuum, 2010), pp. 163-188.
 
280)The Mysteries of the In-Between : Re-reading Disability in E. Nesbit’s Late Victorian Gothic Fiction 
Kathleen Miller  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 6.2 (2012) 143-157
Full text 
281)A Disability Act? The Vaccine Damage Payments Act 1979 and the British Government’s Response to the Pertussis Vaccine Scare 
Gareth Millward  
Social History of Medicine, 30.2 (2017) 429-447
Full text 
282)Social Security Policy and the Early Disability Movement—Expertise, Disability, and the Government, 1965–77 
Gareth Millward  
20th Century British History, 26.2 (2015) 274-297
Full text 
283)The disabled detective : sleuthing disability in contemporary crime fiction 
Susannah B. Mintz  
(London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020)
 
284)Was Thomas Killigrew a Cripple? An Unpublished Letter from Thomas Killigrew to the Duke of Ormonde 
Riki Miyoshi  
Notes and Queries, 61.3 (2014) 388-391
Full text 
285)A tale of three deaf schools in South Wales 
Cedric J. Moon   & British Deaf History Society  
(Feltham: British Deaf History Society Publications, 2010)
 
286)The dolls’ dressmaker re(ad)dressed : Jenny Wren’s critique of childhood, femininity, and appearance 
Ben Moore  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 44.3 (2016) 473-490
Full text 
287)The mayor of Northampton’s fund for the housebound and the poor children’s Christmas dinner fund 
Roger J. B. Morris  
Family & Community History, 17.1 (2014) 3-20
Full text 
288)Sounding Dismodernism in James Joyce’s Ulysses 
Daniel Ryan Morse  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 12.4 (2018) 459-475
Full text 
289)Sight correction : vision and blindness in Eighteenth-Century Britain 
Chris Mounsey  
Peculiar bodies : stories and histories (Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press, 2019)
1 review(s)
 
290)The idea of disability in the eighteenth century 
ed. by Chris Mounsey  
Transits: literature, thought & culture 1650-1850 (Lewisburg (PA): Bucknell University Press, 2014)
 
291)The province of affliction : illness and the making of early New England  
Ben Mutschler  
American beginnings, 1500-1900 (Chicago: Chicago University Press, 2020)
2 review(s)
 
292)Of Ear Trumpets, Audiphones and the ‘Language of the Fingers’ (Kar Pallavi Bhasha): Technologies for the Deaf in British India, 1850-1950  
Aparna Nair  
in: Making disability modern : design histories, ed. by Bess Williamson and Elizabeth E. Guffey (London; New York: Bloomsbury Visual Arts, 2020), pp. 77-94.
Full text 
293)‘These Curly-Bearded, Olive-Skinned Warriors’: Medicine, Prosthetics, Rehabilitation and the Disabled Sepoy in the First World War, 1914–1920 
Aparna Nair  
Social History of Medicine, 33.3 (2020) 798-818
Full text 
294)‘They Shall See His Face’ : Blindness in British India, 1850–1950 
Aparna Nair  
Medical History, 61.2 (2017) 181-199
Full text 
295)Down’s syndrome : the biography 
Chris Nancollas  
(London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 2012)
 
296)Disabled Operators : Training Disabled Ex-servicemen as Projectionists during the Great War 
Lawrence Napper  
Journal of British Cinema and Television, 15.1 (2018) 94-114
Full text 
297)Deafness: Deafnesses and Silences in Shakespeare’s England 
Jennifer Nelson  
in: A cultural history of disability in the Renaissance, ed. by Susan Anderson and Liam Haydon, Cultural history of disability, 3 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 101-116.
Full text 
298)Morality and Monstrous Disability in Topographia Hibernica 
Derek Newman-Stille  
in: The treatment of disabled persons in Medieval Europe : examining disability in the historical, legal, literary, medical, and religious discourse of the middle ages, ed. by Wendy J. Turner and Tory Vandeventer Pearman (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010), pp. 231-258.
 
299)Disability, fraud and medical experience at the Royal Hospital of Chelsea in the long eighteenth century [Britain’s soldiers : rethinking war and… 
Caroline Louise Nielsen  
in: Britain’s soldiers : rethinking war and society, 1715-1815, ed. by Kevin Linch and Matthew McCormack, Eighteenth-century worlds, 5 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2014), pp. 183-201.
 
300)The Chelsea out-pensioners : image and reality in eighteenth-century and early nineteenth-century social care 
Caroline Louise Nielsen  
(Thesis (Ph. D.) – University of Newcastle upon Tyne, 2014)
 
301)Amputated Men, Colonial Bureaucracy, and Masculinity in Post-World War I Colonial Nigeria 
George N. Njung  
Journal of Social History, 53.3 (2020) 620-643
Full text 
302)A Brummie boy goes to war 
Andrew Norman  
(Wellington [Som.]: Halsgrove, 2011)
 
303)Disability Discrimination Law in the United Kingdom and the New Civil Rights History : The Contribution of Caroline Gooding 
Nick O’Brien  
Journal of Law and Society, 43.3 (2016) 444-468
Full text 
304)A tale of two schools : educating Catholic female deaf children in Ireland, 1846–1946 
Noel Patrick O’Connell  
History of Education, 45.2 (2016) 188-205
Full text 
305)Through the arch : St. Mary’s School for Deaf Girls : remembering 170 years, 1846-2016 
Josephine O’Leary   & Alvean E. Jones  
(Dublin, Ireland: St. Mary’s Deaf Heritage, 2017)
 
306)“Disruptive Energies” : Electrotherapy and Early Fiction Films in Europe and America, 1907–1911 
Catherine Oakley  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 9.3 (2015) 295-312
Full text 
307)“What’s Your Story, Son?”: Disability and Narrative in Stewart Parker’s Hopdance 
Katarzyna Ojrzyńska  
New Hibernia Review, 22.4 (2018) 129-142
Full text 
308)Models for the Blind 
Jan Eric Olsén  
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century, 19 (2014)
Full text 
309)“You are deaf” : The Life of Dr John Kitto 
Andrew Owen  
(London: The Wakeman Trust, 2018)
 
310)Wooden Legs and Tales of Sorrow Done : The Literary Broken Soldier of the Late Eighteenth Century 
Simon Parkes  
Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 36.2 (2013) 191-207
Full text 
311)Tales of idiots, signifying something : evidence of process in the Inquisitions Post Mortem 
Kate Parkin  
in: The fifteenth-century inquisitions post mortem : a companion, ed. by Michael Hicks (Woodbridge: Boydell, 2012), pp. 79-96.
 
312)Cannwyll yn Olau : stori John Puleston Jones 
Harri Parri  
(Caernarfon: Gwasg y Bwthyn Cyf, 2018)
2 review(s)
 
313)No country fit for heroes : the plight of disabled Kenyan veterans 
Timothy Parsons  
in: Africa and World War II, ed. by Judith A. Byfield, Carolyn A. Brown, Timothy Parsons and Ahmad Alawad Sikainga (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015), pp. 127-146.
 
314)Disability, Blood, and Liminality in Malory’s “Tale of the Sankgreal” 
Tory Vandeventer Pearman  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 10.3 (2016) 271-286
Full text 
315)Heterosyncrasy as a Way of Life : Disability and the Heterosyncratic Community in Amis and Amiloun 
Tory Vandeventer Pearman  
New Medieval Literatures, 15 (2013) 285-312
Full text 
316)Disruptive Dames : Disability and the Loathly Lady in the Tale of Florent, the Wife of Bath’s Tale, and the Weddynge of Sir Gawain and Dame Ragnelle 
Tory Vandeventer Pearman  
in: The treatment of disabled persons in Medieval Europe : examining disability in the historical, legal, literary, medical, and religious discourse of the middle ages, ed. by Wendy J. Turner and Tory Vandeventer Pearman (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010), pp. 291-312.
 
317)Women and disability in medieval literature 
Tory Vandeventer Pearman  
The new Middle Ages (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010)
 
318)A victory over prejudice : the life and times of Edward Harrison MD 1759-1838 : medical reformer and pioneer in curing spinal deformities, founder… 
Bob Pendell  
(Horncastle: Bob Pendell, 2011)
 
319)The blindness, deafness and madness of King George III : psychiatric interactions 
Timothy J. Peters   & Allan Beveridge  
Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh, 40.1 (2010) 81-85
Full text 
320)The Afterlife of Freak Shows 
Fiona Pettit  
in: Popular exhibitions, science and showmanship, 1840-1910, ed. by Joe Kember, John Plunkett and Jill A. Sullivan, Science and culture in the nineteenth century, 16 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 61-78, 246-250.
 
321)Milton and the making of Paradise Lost 
William Poole  
(Cambridge (MA): Harvard University Press, 2017)
1 review(s)
 
322)“Eloquent Limbs”: D.H. Lawrence and the Aesthetics of Disability 
Valerie Popp  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 5.1 (2011) 35-52
Full text 
323)A visionary friend : Exeter’s school for the blind 1838-1965 
Bill Pratt  
([Trowbridge]: West of England School Association, 2015)
 
324)‘Where is the Fault?’ : The Starvation of Edward Cooper at the Isle of Wight Workhouse in 1877 
Kim Price  
Social History of Medicine, 26.1 (2013) 21-37
Full text 
325)“The dead man come to life again” : Edward Albert and the strategies of black endurance 
Natalie Prizel  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 45.2 (2017) 293-320
Full text 
326)Paternalism and prosthetics: Life for disabled veterans and their families on a post-war settlement 
Martin Purdy  
in: Veterans of the First World War : ex-servicemen and ex-servicewomen in post-war Britain and Ireland, ed. by David Swift and Oliver Wilkinson, Routledge studies in First World War history (London: Routledge, 2019), pp. 142-157.
Full text 
327)Jeremy Bentham on Physical Disability: A Problem for Whom? 
Michael Quinn  
Review of Disability Studies: An International Journal, 8.4 (2012) [s.p.]
 
328)Cathleen ni Houlihan and the Disability Aesthetics of Irish National Culture 
Marion Quirici  
Éire-Ireland, 50.3 & 4 (2015) 74-93
 
329)The open cage : not hearing but living 
Phoebe Raddings  
(Hatfield: HKB Press, 2011)
 
330)Remodelling the Boundaries of Normality : Lionel S Penrose and Population Surveys of Mental Ability 
Edmund Ramsden  
in: Human heredity in the twentieth century, ed. by Bernd Gausemeier, Staffan Müller-Wille and Edmund Ramsden, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 15 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2013), pp. 39-54.
 
331)Conflicting Models of Care for People with Mental Disabilities in Charles Dickens’s Fiction and Journalism 
Gillian Ray-Barruel  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 9.1 (2015) 89-105
Full text 
332)The fearless Benjamin Lay : the Quaker dwarf who became the first revolutionary abolitionist 
Marcus Rediker  
(London: Verso, 2017)
12 review(s)
 
333)Blind workers against charity : the National League of the Blind of Great Britain and Ireland, 1893-1970 
Matthias Reiss  
Palgrave studies in the history of social movements (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015)
1 review(s)
 
334)Sean O’Casey’s Late Modernism: Gender Race And Disabled Bodies On The Irish Expressionist Stage 
Paige Reynolds  
in: A history of Irish modernism, ed. by Gregory Castle and Patrick Bixby (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019), pp. 227-242.
Full text 
335)Material culture and the “after-care” of disabled soldiers in Britain during the Great War 
Jeffrey S. Reznick  
in: Bodies in conflict : corporeality, materiality, and transformation, ed. by Nicholas J. Saunders and Paul Cornish (London: Routledge, 2014), pp. 91-102.
 
336)The Other King’s Speech : Elocution and the Politics of Disability in Georgian Britain 
Jared S. Richman  
The Eighteenth Century [Lubbock], 59.3 (2018) 279-304
Full text 
337)Crafting Inclusion for ‘Invalid’ Women : The Girls’ Friendly Society Central Needlework Depôt, 1899–1947 
Vivienne Richmond  
in: Craft, community and the material culture of place and politics, 19th-20th century, ed. by Janice Helland, Beverly Lemire and Alena Buis, The histories of material culture and collecting, 1700-1950 (Farnham: Ashgate, [2014]), pp. 161-176.
 
338)Intimations of Mortality : Stewart Parker’s Hopdance 
Marilynn J. Richtarik  
Études irlandaises, 42.1 (2017) 93-103
Full text 
339)Eugene Lee-Hamilton’s Sonnets of the Wingless Hours: Baudelaire, Neurasthenia, and Poetic Recovery  
Patricia Rigg  
Victorian Studies, 63.4 (2021) 491-513
Full text 
340)Sickness in the Workhouse: Poor Law Medical Care in Provincial England, 1834-1914 
Alistair Ritch  
Rochester studies in medical history (Woodbridge [England]: Boydell & Brewer, 2019)
6 review(s)
 
341)English Poor Law Institutional Care for Older People : Identifying the ‘Aged and Infirm’ and the ‘Sick’ in Birmingham Workhouse, 1852–1912 
Alistair Ritch  
Social History of Medicine, 27.1 (2014) 64-85
Full text 
342)‘No Man’s Land’: Disability, Rehabilitation, Welfare Policy and the British Ex-Service Migrant in Australia, 1918–39 
Michael Robinson  
Social History of Medicine, 34.1 (2021) 214-236
Full text 
343)Shell-shocked British Army veterans in Ireland, 1918-39 : a difficult homecoming 
Michael Robinson  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2020)
3 review(s)
Full text 
344)“Nobody’s children?” : the Ministry of Pensions and the treatment of disabled Great War veterans in the Irish Free State, 1921–1939 
Michael Robinson  
Irish Studies Review, 25.3 (2017) 316-335
Full text 
345)A Fruitless, Female Body: Disability and Devotion in An Collins’s Divine Songs and Meditacions (1653) 
Katey Roden  
Early Modern Women, 15.1 (2020) 131-141
Full text 
346)Emotion in narrating the history of learning disability 
Sheena Rolph   & Dorothy Atkinson  
Oral History, 38.2 (2010) 53-63
 
347)A Still Sound Mind: Personal Agency of Impaired People in Anglo-Saxon Care and Cure Narratives 
Marit Ronen  
in: New approaches to disease, disability and medicine in Medieval Europe, ed. by Erin Connelly and Stefanie Künzel (Oxford: Archaeopress Publishing, 2018), pp. 19-30.
 
348)Little Ruby’s Hand: Young Women and the Emotional Experience of Caregiving in Britain after the First World War 
Michael Roper  
Proceedings of the British Academy, 227 (2020) 59-77
 
349)Little Ruby’s hand : young women and the emotional experience of caregiving in Britain after the First World War 
Michael Roper  
in: Total war : an emotional history, ed. by Lucy Noakes, Claire Langhamer and Claudia Siebrecht, Proceedings of the British Academy, 227 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020), pp. [s.p.].
Full text 
350)Subjectivities in the Aftermath : Children of Disabled Soldiers in Britain After the Great War 
Michael Roper  
in: Psychological trauma and the legacies of the First World War, ed. by Jason Crouthamel and Peter Leese (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), pp. 165-191.
Full text 
351)Pills, Potions and Devices : Treatments for Hearing Loss Advertised in Mid-nineteenth Century British Newspapers 
Liz Ross  , Phil Lyon   & Craig Cathcart  
Social History of Medicine, 27.3 (2014) 530-556
Full text 
352)Dissembling disability in early modern English drama 
Lindsey Row-Heyveld  
Literary disability studies (Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018)
 
353)‘We Will Never Forget You’: Christian Charities and the Rehabilitation of Disabled ex-Servicemen in Inter-War Leeds 
Bethany Rowley  
Local Population Studies, 101 (2018) 47-63
Full text 
354)The Princess Christian Farm Colony and Hospital 1895-1995 : “Just a bit barmy” 
Chris Rowley  
(Leigh, Tonbridge, Kent: Christopher Rowley, 2018)
2 review(s)
 
355)From Shell Shock to Shellac : The Great War, Blindness, and Britain’s Talking Book Library 
Matthew Rubery  
20th Century British History, 26.1 (2015) 1-25
Full text 
356)Philomela Accuses 
Cory James Rushton  
in: Disability and medieval law : history, literature, society, ed. by Cory Rushton (Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars, 2013), pp. 157-173.
 
357)The collected writings of Edward Rushton, (1756-1814) 
Edward Rushton   & Paul Baines  
Liverpool English texts and studies, 65 (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2014)
 
358)Douglas Bader 
Dilip Sarkar  
(Stroud, Gloucestershire: Amberley, 2013)
 
359)Romance’s rival : familiar marriage in Victorian fiction 
Talia Schaffer  
(New York: Oxford University Press, [2016])
 
360)Death of the innocents : the story of drama and loss caused by the fire at the school for deaf children in Strabane in 1856 
Clive Scoular  
(Killyleagh, County Down: Clive Scoular, 2013)
 
361)‘She killed not from hate, but from love’ : motherhood, melodrama and mercy killing in the case of May Brownhill 
Lizzie Seal  
Women’s History Review, 27.5 (2018) 669-687
Full text 
362)Disabled devotion: Original sin and universal disability in the Prik of Conscience 
Samantha Katz Seal  
in: Rethinking medieval margins and marginality, ed. by Ann E. Zimo, Tiffany D. Vann Sprecher, Kathryn Reyerson and Debra Blumenthal, Studies in medieval history and culture (London: Routledge, 2020), .
Full text 
363)“Traditionally, Disability Was Not Seen as Such” : Writing and Healing in the Work of Mohegan Medicine People 
Siobhan Senier  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 7.2 (2013) 213-229
Full text 
364)‘If one member of the family is disabled the family as a whole is disabled’ : Thalidomide children and the emergence of the family carer in… 
Claire Sewell  
Family & Community History, 18.1 (2015) 37-52
Full text 
365)Disability and social change : private lives and public policies 
Sonali Shah   & Mark Priestley  
(Bristol: Policy Press, 2011)
 
366)The Multiple Lives of Billy Waters: Dangerous Theatricality and Networked Illustrations in Nineteenth-Century Popular Culture 
Mary L. Shannon  
Nineteenth Century Theatre and Film, 46.2 (2019) 161-189
Full text 
367)Anna Jameson’s Diary of an Ennuyée : The Pains and Privileges of Being a Nineteeth-Century Invalid Traveller in Italy 
Hannah Sikstrom  
in: Les voyageuses britanniques au XVIIIe siècle : L’étape lyonnaise dans l’itinéraire du Grand Tour, ed. by Isabelle Baudino, Des idées et des femmes (Paris: L’Harmattan, 2015), pp. 189-204.
 
368)The making of Ludwig Guttmann 
John Russell Silver  
Journal of Medical Biography, 21.4 (2013) 229-238
Full text 
369)Ludwig Guttmann (1899-1980), Stoke Mandeville Hospital and the Paralympic Games 
John Russell Silver  
Journal of Medical Biography, 20.3 (2012) 101-105
Full text 
370)Idiocy and the conceptual economy of madness 
Murray K. Simpson  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 190-210.
 
371)The unhal and the semantics of Anglo Saxon disability 
Fay Skevington  
in: Social dimensions of medieval disease and disability, ed. by Sally Crawford and Christina Lee, BAR, International ser., 2668 – Studies in early medicine, 3 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2014), pp. 7-14.
 
372)The case of King Richard III 
A. Skrziepietz  
Scottish Medical Journal, 56.4 (2011) 227-229
Full text 
373)Aged, Decrepit and Destitute : Poor Relief and Health Care in the Bahamas, 1810-1910 
Leonard D. Smith  
Journal of Caribbean History, 49.2 (2015) 189-215
 
374)Signs of my times : a life with deaf people 
Martin Smith  
(Leeds: Beecroft Publications, 2018)
 
375)‘Blind Tom’ abroad : race, disability, and transatlantic representations of Thomas Wiggins 
Whitney Womack Smith  
Journal of Transatlantic Studies, 14.2 (2016) 164-175
Full text 
376)Perceptions of infant disability in Roman Britain 
W. Southwell-Wright  
in: Infant health and death in Roman Italy and beyond, ed. by Maureen Carroll and Emma-Jayne Graham, Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary series, 96 (Portsmouth (RI): Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2014), pp. 111-130.
 
377)Activity and Passivity : Class and Gender in the Case of the Artificial Hand 
Clare Stainthorp  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 45.1 (2017) 1-16
Full text 
378)Sensationalism and the construction of intellectual disability 
Timothy Stainton  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 128-147.
 
379)The Wordsworth-Coleridge circle and the aesthetics of disability 
Emily B. Stanback  
Palgrave studies in literature, science and medicine (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016)
1 review(s)
 
380)Club feet and charity : children at the House of Charity, Soho, 1848-1914 
Pat Starkey  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 15-28.
 
381)Curious Prescriptions : Selfish Care in Victorian Fictions of Disability 
Kristen H. Starkowski  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 11.4 (2017) 461-476
Full text 
382)My years with the British Theatre of the Deaf 1963-1977 
Ian M. Stewart  
([United Kingdom?]: [s.n.], 2015)
 
383)Mary Stephens Corbishley MBE, 1905-1995 : a biography of her life and work at her oral schools for deaf children in Cuckfield, East Sussex, the UK 
Ian M. Stewart  
(Central Milton Keynes: AuthorHouse, 2010)
 
384)Interface Productions and Disability Programming for Channel 4 : 1984 – 1986 
Tony Steyger   & Jamie Clarke  
in: Documentary and disability, ed. by Catalin Brylla and Helen Hughes (Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2017), pp. 195-210.
 
385)The Indigenous Casualties of War: Disability, Death, and the Racialized Politics of Pensions, 1914–39 
Eric Story  
Canadian Historical Review, 102.2 (2021) 279-304
Full text 
386)The Role of the Irish Division of the Royal Medico-Psychological Association in the Development of Intellectual Disability Nursing in Ireland 
J. F. Sweeney  
Canadian Bulletin of Medical History, 28.1 (2011) 71-94
 
387)‘Get the best article in the market’: prostheses for women in nineteenth-century literature and commerce 
Ryan Sweet  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 114-136.
 
388)Introduction: British veterans after the First World War 
David Swift   & Oliver Wilkinson  
in: Veterans of the First World War : ex-servicemen and ex-servicewomen in post-war Britain and Ireland, ed. by David Swift and Oliver Wilkinson, Routledge studies in First World War history (London: Routledge, 2019), pp. 1-16.
Full text 
389)The Idiot as Artist:The Fantasy Boats of James Henry Pullen 
Kirsten Tambling  
Art History, 43.5 (2020) 928-952
Full text 
390)Tuberculosis and disabled identity in nineteenth century literature : invalid lives 
Alex Tankard  
Literary disability studies (Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2018)
 
391)The Victorian Consumptive in Disability Studies 
Alex Tankard  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 5.1 (2011) 17-33
Full text 
392)Abnormal narratives : disability and omniscience in the Victorian novel 
Clayton Carlyle Tarr  
Victorian Literature and Culture, 45.3 (2017) 645-664
Full text 
393)Insanity, philanthropy and emigration : dealing with insane children in late-nineteenth-century north-west England 
Steven J. Taylor  
History of Psychiatry, 25.2 (2014) 224-236
Full text 
394)Useless Soldiers : The Dilemma of Discharging Mentally Unfit Soldiers during the Second World War 
Nafsika Thalassis  
Social History of Medicine, 23.1 (2010) 98-115
Full text 
395)Disease or Disability : The Conceptual Relationship in Medieval and Early Modem England 
John M. Theilmann  
in: The treatment of disabled persons in Medieval Europe : examining disability in the historical, legal, literary, medical, and religious discourse of the middle ages, ed. by Wendy J. Turner and Tory Vandeventer Pearman (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010), pp. 197-230.
 
396)Guiding me home & away : the autobiography 
Dave Thomas  
(Huntington: Hornet Books, 2019)
 
397)The Happy Chance of Jack Clemo 
Luke Thompson  
Cornish Studies, 21 (2013) 276-287
Full text 
398)The South Wales Miners’ Federation as a Disability Organisation 
Steven Thompson  
Llafur, 11.2 (2013) 142-147
 
399)The mixed economy of welfare and the care of sick and disabled children in the south Wales coalfield, c.1850-1950 
Steven Thompson  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), .
 
400)Blindness and writing : from Wordsworth to Gissing 
Heather Tilley  
Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture, 109 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2018)
2 review(s)
 
401)Portraying Blindness: Nineteenth-Century Images of Tactile Reading 
Heather Tilley  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 38.3 (2018) [s.p.]
Full text 
402)The Sentimental Touch : Dickens’s Old Curiosity Shop and the Feeling Reader 
Heather Tilley  
Journal of Victorian Culture, 16.2 (2011) 226-241
Full text 
403)Citizenship and Learning Disabled People : The Mental Health Charity MIND’s 1970s Campaign in Historical Context 
Jonathan Toms  
Medical History, 61.4 (2017) 481-499
Full text 
404)“For know, alas, I’m dumb, alas I love” : Rhetoric of disability, female agency and tragedy in “The Dumb Virgin” 
Juan de Dios Torralbo Caballero  
Sederi, 27 (2017) 167-192
 
405)“A Parliament of Monsters”: Genre, Disability, and the Revival of Epic Ability in Wordsworth’s Prelude 
Pasquale S. Toscano  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 39.4 (2019)
Full text 
406)Kingly impairments in Anglo-Saxon literature : God’s curse and God’s blessing 
Beth Tovey  
in: Disability in the Middle Ages : reconsiderations and reverberations, ed. by Joshua R. Eyler (Farnham: Ashgate, 2010), pp. 135-48.
 
407)‘Idiot’ – Questions around Early Quaker Identity in Light of a Legal Dispute 
Christine Trevett  
Quaker Studies, 22.2 (2017) 147-178
Full text 
408)For dowager or disability? John Nash’s designs for the countess of Shannon  
Rebecca Tropp  
The Georgian Group Journal, 30 (2022) 149-160
 
409)Blindness: Conversations with the Blind, or “Aren’t You Surprised I Can Speak?” 
Kate E Tunstall  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 73-86.
Full text 
410)Education, traning and social competence : special education in Glasgow since 1945 
Angela Turner  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 159-171, 221-225.
 
411)‘Bottom dog men’ : Disability, Social Welfare and Advocacy in the Scottish Coalfields in the Interwar Years, 1918–1939 
Angela Turner   & Arthur McIvor  
Scottish Historical Review, 96.2 (2017) 187-213
Full text 
412)Mobility Impairment: Experiences of “Lameness” in Eighteenth-century England 
David M. Turner  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 39-56.
Full text 
413)Picturing Disability in Eighteenth-Century England 
David M. Turner  
in: The Oxford handbook of disability history, ed. by Michael A. Rembis, Catherine Jean Kudlick and Kim E. Nielsen, Oxford Handbooks Online (New York: Oxford University Press, 2018), pp. 327-350.
Full text 
414)“Not So Deformed in Body as Debauched in Behaviour”: Disability and “Marginality” in Late Seventeenth- and Early Eighteenth-Century England 
David M. Turner  
in: The place of the social margins, 1350-1750, ed. by Andrew Spicer and Jane L. Stevens Crawshaw, Routledge studies in cultural history, 48 (London: Routledge, 2017), pp. 39-56.
 
415)The Price of Coal – New Disability Histories [Conference report] 
David M. Turner  
Llafur, 11.2 (2013) 138-141
 
416)Disability and Crime in Eighteenth-Century England : Physical Impairment at the Old Bailey 
David M. Turner  
Cultural and Social History – The Journal of the Social History Society, 9.1 (2012) 47-64
Full text 
417)Disability in eighteenth-century England : imagining physical impairment 
David M. Turner  
Routledge studies in modern British history, 8 (London: Routledge, 2012)
 
418)Disability in the Industrial Revolution : physical impairment in British coalmining, 1780-1880 
David M. Turner   & Daniel Blackie  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018)
3 review(s)
Full text 
419)Technologies of the Body : Polite Consumption and the Correction of Deformity in Eighteenth-Century England 
David M. Turner   & Alun Withey  
History, 99.338 (2014) 775-796
Full text 
420)Conceptualization of intellectual disability in medieval English law 
Wendy J. Turner  
in: Intellectual disability : a conceptual history, 1200-1900, ed. by Patrick McDonagh, C. F. Goodey and Timothy Stainton, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2018), pp. 26-44.
 
421)‘He was not an idiota from birth, nor is he now’ : false, temporary, and overturned charges of mental incapacity in 14th-century England 
Wendy J. Turner  
in: Social dimensions of medieval disease and disability, ed. by Sally Crawford and Christina Lee, BAR, International ser., 2668 – Studies in early medicine, 3 (Oxford: Archaeopress, 2014), pp. 37-46.
 
422)Care and custody of the mentally ill, incompetent, and disabled in medieval England 
Wendy J. Turner  
Cursor Mundi, 16 (Turnhout: Brepols, [2013])
 
423)Town and Country : A Comparison of the Treatment of the Mentally Disabled in Late Medieval English Common Law and Chartered Boroughs 
Wendy J. Turner  
in: Madness in medieval law and custom, ed. by Wendy J. Turner, Later medieval Europe, 6 (Leiden: Brill, 2010), pp. 17-38.
 
424)Ageing Yeats: From Fascism to Disability 
Joseph Valente  
in: Irish literature in transition, 1880-1940, ed. by Marjorie Elizabeth Howes (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020), pp. 173-195.
Full text 
425)“Man and machinery blended in one”: Dexter’s Wheelchair and the Victorian Railway in Wilkie Collins’s The Law and the Lady 
Alexandra Valint  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 43.2 (2021) 131-148
Full text 
426)Atypical Bodies : Anomalous Bodies in the Eighteenth Century 
Sara Van den Berg  
in: A cultural history of disability in the long eighteenth century, ed. by D. Christopher Gabbard and Susannah B. Mintz, Cultural history of disability, 4 (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2020), pp. 19-38.
Full text 
427)Phyllis M. Tookey Kerridge and the science of audiometric standardization in Britain 
Jaipreet Virdi   & Coreen Anne McGuire  
British Journal for the History of Science, 51.1 (2018) 123-146
Full text 
428)Between cure and prosthetic: ‘good fit’ in artificial eardrums 
Jaipreet Virdi-Dhesi  
in: Rethinking modern prostheses in Anglo-American commodity cultures, 1820-1939, ed. by Claire L. Jones, Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2017), pp. 48-69.
 
429)Curtis’s Cephaloscope : Deafness and the Making of Surgical Authority in London, 1816–1845 
Jaipreet Virdi-Dhesi  
Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 87.3 (2013) 347-377
Full text 
430)Alone in a silent world : the story of the Stephensons and the Sheffield Deaf 
Nick Waite  
(Kibworth Beauchamp: Matador, [2016])
 
431)Aradale: the making of a haunted asylum  
David Waldron  , Sharn Waldron   & Nathaniel Buchanan  
(North Melbourne (Vic): Arcadia, 2020)
1 review(s)
 
432)‘A person of the second order’ : the plight of the intellectually disabled in nineteenth-century Ireland 
Oonagh Walsh  
in: Philanthropy in nineteenth-century Ireland, ed. by Laurence M. Geary and Oonagh Walsh, Nineteenth-century Ireland Series, 16 (Dublin: Four Courts, 2015), pp. 161-180.
 
433)Romantic Disease Discourse : Disability, Immunity, and Literature 
Fuson Wang  
Nineteenth-Century Contexts, 33.5 (2011) 467-482
Full text 
434)Between the Sheets : Contagion, Touch, and Text 
Vanessa Warne  
19: Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century, 19 (2014)
Full text 
435)“So that the sense of touch may supply the want of sight” : Blind Reading and Nineteenth-Century British Print Culture 
Vanessa Warne  
in: Media, technology, and literature in the nineteenth century : image, sound, touch, ed. by Colette Colligan and Margaret Linley, The Nineteenth Century Series (Farnham: Ashgate, 2011), pp. 43-64.
 
436)Clearing the Streets : Blindness and Begging in Henry Mayhew’s London Labour and the London Poor 
Vanessa Warne  
in: City limits : perspectives on the historical European city, ed. by Glenn J. Clark, Judith Owens and Greg T. Smith (Montréal (PQ): McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2010), pp. 205-226.
 
437)Memoirs of an Invalid : James Miller and the Making of the British-American Empire during the Seven Years’ War 
Peter Way  
in: Rethinking U.S. labor history : essays on the working-class experience, 1756-2009, ed. by Donna T. Haverty-Stacke and Daniel J. Walkowitz (New York: Continuum, 2010), pp. 25-53.
 
438)‘A Great Blemish to her Beauty’: Female Facial Disfigurement in Early Modern England 
Michelle Webb  
in: Approaching Facial Difference: Past and Present, ed. by Patricia Skinner and Emily Cock, Facialities (London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2018), pp. 26-43.
Full text 
439)Merlin’s ‘invalid or gouty chair’ and the origin of the self-propelled wheelchair 
Marie-France Weiner   & John Russell Silver  
Journal of Medical Biography, 24.3 (2016) 412-417
Full text 
440)Mimicry, Property, and the Reproduction of Celebrity in Eighteenth-Century England 
Jane Wessel  
The Eighteenth Century [Lubbock], 60.1 (2019) 65-86
Full text 
441)Citizenship, Vulnerability and Mental Incapacity in England, 1900–1960s 
Janet Weston  
Medical History, 63.3 (2019) 270-290
Full text 
442)The history of British deaf tennis : our forever changing world 
Bryan Whalley   & Charles Herd  
(North Harrow: Bryan Whalley, 2010)
 
443)Holiday camps, castles and stately homes : the residential option for the evacuation of disabled children during World War II 
Sue Wheatcroft  
in: The Blitz and its legacy : wartime destruction to post-war reconstruction, ed. by Mark Clapson and Peter J. Larkham (Farnham: Ashgate, 2013), pp. 31-46.
 
444)Worth saving : Disabled children during the Second World War 
Sue Wheatcroft  
Disability history (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2013)
 
445)Cured by kindness? : child guidance services during the Second World War 
Sue Wheatcroft  
in: Disabled children : contested caring, 1850-1979, ed. by Anne Borsay and Pamela Dale, Studies for the Society for the Social History of Medicine, 8 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2012), pp. 145-157, 218-221.
 
446)Towers Ward, Purdown : a place of care for people with learning difficulties : a brief history of Towers Ward at Stoke Park, using accounts from… 
Grace Whitfield  
(Stapleton, Bristol: Glenside Hospital Museum, 2018)
 
447)No Penis? No Problem : Intersections of Queerness and Disability in Laurence Sterne’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, Gentleman 
Jarred Wiehe  
The Eighteenth Century [Lubbock], 58.2 (2017) 177-193
Full text 
448)From backward children to bright futures : the story of the first fifty years of Barnet Mencap 
Mike Wiffen   & Barnet Mencap  
(Finchley, London: Barnet Mencap, [2015])
 
449)“No Hope for Him Unless He Can Be Got Out of the Country” : Disabled Irish Republicans in America, 1922-1935 
Gavin Wilk  
New Hibernia Review, 18.1 (2014) 106-119
Full text 
450)‘Now walks like others’ : A preliminary enquiry into the Northampton Crippled Children’s Fund 
A. N. Williams   & C. Chan  
Family & Community History, 16.2 (2013) 128-144
Full text 
451)Unfixable forms : disability, performance, and the early modern English theater  
Katherine Schaap Williams  
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2021)
Full text 
452)Tommy, Primal Therapy, and the Counter-cultural Critique of “Sick Society” and “Cripple Psychology” 
Paul Williams   & Brian Edgar  
Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, 9.2 (2015) 207-223
Full text 
453)The Trouble with Disability in Shakespeare Studies 
Jeffrey R. Wilson  
Disability Studies Quarterly, 37.2 (2017) [s.p.]
Full text 
454)Hagiographical Interpretations of Disability in the Twelfth-Century Miracula of St Frideswide of Oxford 
Louise Elizabeth Wilson  
in: The treatment of disabled persons in Medieval Europe : examining disability in the historical, legal, literary, medical, and religious discourse of the middle ages, ed. by Wendy J. Turner and Tory Vandeventer Pearman (Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press, 2010), pp. 135-166.
 
455)Technology, self-fashioning and politeness in eighteenth-century Britain : refined bodies 
Alun Withey  
(Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016)
 
456)“now deaf 1740” Entrapment, foreboding, and exorcism in late Swift 
David Womersley  
in: Politics and literature in the age of Swift : English and Irish perspectives, ed. by Claude Julien Rawson (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 162-184.
 
457)‘Lashings of Grog and Girls’: Masculinity and Sexuality in the Rehabilitation of Facially Disfigured Servicemen in the Second World War 
Jasmine Wood  
War & Society [University of New South Wales], 40.4 (2021) 296-314
Full text 
458)Pictures of Peter Pan : Institutions, Local Definitions of ‘Mental Deficiency’, and the Filtering of Children in Early Twentieth-Century England 
Rebecca Wynter  
Family & Community History, 18.2 (2015) 122-138
Full text 
459)Schwangerschaft, Geburt und Kinderpflege auf den frühmittelalterlichen britischen Inseln [Pregnancy, childbirth and child care in the early… 
Christian-Michael Zottl  
Österreichische Zeitschrift für Geschichtswissenschaften, 22.2 (2011) 168-190
 

%d bloggers like this: