
Disability Activism in and out of the Academy
5 contributors - Hardback
£55.99
Alexandra F. Morris is a disabled Egyptologist, lecturer, and disability activist tying the past to the present. Her research is on disability in ancient Egypt, the Classical world, and creating inclusive museums. She holds many roles in academic, disability, heritage, and government sectors. She has cerebral palsy and dyspraxia.
Cecily Bateman is a PhD student at the University of Cambridge writing their dissertation on the use of Classics by the post-war European far-right. When not looking at the worst of humanity, they are interested in disability history and theory. Alongside academic work, Cecily mentors disabled students for the Accessibility and Disability Resource Centre at the University of Cambridge.
Hannah Vogel is researching ableism and disability in the ancient world and in the disciplines of history and archaeology. She is a PhD student and sessional teaching academic at Macquarie University, Sydney Australia. Hannah is an advocate for accessibility and has worked in public outreach, education and inclusive pedagogies.
Karl Mercer is a disabled, working-class independent scholar of Ancient History and Classics and self-identified ‘Outsider’. His museum work has involved in-person and media engagement and designing casual learning activities. His Curating Visibility exhibition at Dover Museum - At the End of History – featured a VR piece that may be the first of its kind for visually impaired access.
Mar A Rodda is Assistant Professor in Greek and Latin Language Teaching at the University of Cambridge. Their recent postdoctoral work focuses on disability in Lucian of Samosata, which they explore through queer and trans perspectives. They also maintain an interest in digital humanities and computational approaches to classical languages, which were the topic of their PhD thesis.