Allergic Intimacies

FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9781531501150

Food, Disability, Desire, and Risk

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By Michael Gill
Imprint:
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
277

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Description

Michael Gill is an associate professor of disability studies as well as the disability studies program coordinator in the Department of Cultural Foundations of Education at Syracuse University. He is the author of Already Doing It: Intellectual Disability and Sexual Agency.

Preface ix Introduction: Why Food Allergies? 1 1 Relational Food Allergy, Immunity, and Environments 25 2 Nut-Free Squirrels and Princesses with Peanut Allergies: Food Allergies, Identity, and Children's Books 43 3 Allergic Reactions through Fluid Exchanges 56 4 You Ate What? Intentionality, Accidents, and Death 77 Conclusion: Pandemics and the Need for Coalitions 97 Acknowledgments 101 Notes 103 Index 123

Gill's Allergic Intimacies is a unique contribution to the social science and humanities literature on food allergy in form and in content.-- "H-Net Reviews" Allergic Intimacies offers a queer crip analysis of food allergies, revealing their fundamentally relational and temporal dimensions. Blurring the boundaries between individuals, their immune systems, and their desires, Gill argues for interdependence and solidarity across allergies and dietary needs.---Alison Kafer, University of Texas at Austin Quite possibly the first of its kind, Allergic Intimacies is a thorough and incisive cultural exploration of how we need to think about allergies via a disability studies framework. Part of the acuity of Michael Gill's Allergic Intimacies is that it reminds us why we so urgently need this kind of analysis to better understand food-related allergies. In light of the current contemporary public health global pandemic, there is an even greater urgency to foreground how food studies and disability studies think, not just about Covid-19, but also about health issues that affect immune-compromised people. Gill's book is a cultural history of food allergies, but it is also so much more than that.---Anita Mannur, Professor of English, Miami University, and author of Intimate Eating: Racialized Spaces and Radical Futures.

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