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Intersectional harassment and deviant embodiment among Autistic adults: (dis)ability,gender and sexuality
Authors:Jessica Penwell Barnett
Affiliation:1. Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Wright State University, Dayton, USAjessica.p.barnett@wright.edu
Abstract:Abstract

Harassment scholarship increasingly attends to the intersectional nature of harassment and its function within systems of domination. However, little of this work includes disability. In-depth interviews with 24 adults on the autism spectrum in the USA demonstrate the intersections of gender, sexuality and (dis)ability in the construction of deviant embodiments as targets for harassment. These intersections also shape how participants made sense of these experiences of violence. Participants’ disability characteristics were often read as gender or sexual variance, with harassers relying on sexist and heterosexist constructs to frighten, demean or humiliate them for disability characteristics. Participant experiences demonstrate the cisgender basis of ‘able-bodied’ identity as well as the ‘able-bodied’ basis of cisgender and heterosexual identities and experiences. The interdependency of gender, sexuality and (dis)ability embodiment point to how it is critical for scholars and activists to account for the role of gender and heterosexist harassment in ableist oppression and disability harassment in (hetero)sexist oppression, as well as the limits of current US law enforcement structures in providing redress for harassment.
Keywords:Violence  harassment  intersectionality  autism  crip theory  heterosexism  gender and sexuality  disablism
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