Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance
Crip Authority explores how Renaissance writers and artists with disabilities drew on consolatory literature to enhance their authority and create a sense of disability community across the centuries. Elizabeth B. Bearden considers how Renaissance writers and artists understood their lived experiences of disability by drawing on the ancient genre of consolation, which aims to comfort people for a variety of hardships, including mental and physical disability. Renaissance writers used the art of consolation to resignify the mental and physical disabilities that their society frequently scorned into an expression of their military, spiritual, political, and most importantly for this study, writerly authority. Bearden names this kind of defiant authorial self-representation crip authority, thereby transgressively cripping our society’s ableist notions of who has the ability and authority to write.  

Disabled authors include Francesco Petrarca, Teresa de Cartagena, Giovani Paolo Lomazzo, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Robert Burton, and John Milton. They all explore their experiences of disability, but their work has rarely or never been considered from a disability studies perspective. Bearden thus brings today’s models of disability studies and crip theory together with early modern articulations of disability based on ancient and Renaissance models of military, political, biblical, and literary authority. In sum, Crip Authority makes a significant contribution to the growing field of early modern disability studies and invites us to rethink the extent of crip history and the endurance of disability gain.
1146854899
Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance
Crip Authority explores how Renaissance writers and artists with disabilities drew on consolatory literature to enhance their authority and create a sense of disability community across the centuries. Elizabeth B. Bearden considers how Renaissance writers and artists understood their lived experiences of disability by drawing on the ancient genre of consolation, which aims to comfort people for a variety of hardships, including mental and physical disability. Renaissance writers used the art of consolation to resignify the mental and physical disabilities that their society frequently scorned into an expression of their military, spiritual, political, and most importantly for this study, writerly authority. Bearden names this kind of defiant authorial self-representation crip authority, thereby transgressively cripping our society’s ableist notions of who has the ability and authority to write.  

Disabled authors include Francesco Petrarca, Teresa de Cartagena, Giovani Paolo Lomazzo, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Robert Burton, and John Milton. They all explore their experiences of disability, but their work has rarely or never been considered from a disability studies perspective. Bearden thus brings today’s models of disability studies and crip theory together with early modern articulations of disability based on ancient and Renaissance models of military, political, biblical, and literary authority. In sum, Crip Authority makes a significant contribution to the growing field of early modern disability studies and invites us to rethink the extent of crip history and the endurance of disability gain.
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Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance

Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance

by Elizabeth Bearden
Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance

Crip Authority: Disability and the Art of Consolation in the Renaissance

by Elizabeth Bearden

Paperback

$39.95 
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Overview

Crip Authority explores how Renaissance writers and artists with disabilities drew on consolatory literature to enhance their authority and create a sense of disability community across the centuries. Elizabeth B. Bearden considers how Renaissance writers and artists understood their lived experiences of disability by drawing on the ancient genre of consolation, which aims to comfort people for a variety of hardships, including mental and physical disability. Renaissance writers used the art of consolation to resignify the mental and physical disabilities that their society frequently scorned into an expression of their military, spiritual, political, and most importantly for this study, writerly authority. Bearden names this kind of defiant authorial self-representation crip authority, thereby transgressively cripping our society’s ableist notions of who has the ability and authority to write.  

Disabled authors include Francesco Petrarca, Teresa de Cartagena, Giovani Paolo Lomazzo, Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Robert Burton, and John Milton. They all explore their experiences of disability, but their work has rarely or never been considered from a disability studies perspective. Bearden thus brings today’s models of disability studies and crip theory together with early modern articulations of disability based on ancient and Renaissance models of military, political, biblical, and literary authority. In sum, Crip Authority makes a significant contribution to the growing field of early modern disability studies and invites us to rethink the extent of crip history and the endurance of disability gain.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780472057610
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
Publication date: 09/22/2025
Series: Corporealities: Discourses Of Disability
Pages: 378
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Elizabeth B. Bearden is Professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

A Note on Translations, Editions, Transcriptions, and Abbreviations

Acknowledgements

Introduction

1. Descending the Mountain: Consoling Disability in Petrarch’s Secretum and De remediis utriusque fortunae

2. A Place at the Table for Teresa de Cartagena:  Working Disability in Arboleda de los enfermos and Marvelous Ability in Admiración opperum Dey

3. From “El Manco de Lepanto” to “El Manco Sano”: Memorializing Cervantine Disability

4. “Experto crede Roberto”: Masquerading Crip Authority and Picturing Consolatory Antics in Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy

5. John Milton’s Consolations for Blindness: Polite Refusals, Disability Swagger, the Work of Patience, and Strength in Weakness

6. Styling Disability: Lomazzo, Mannerism, and Crip Touches Across Time

Coda

Works Cited

Index

What People are Saying About This

Marina Brownlee

Crip Authority offers a profound and powerful contribution to the dignity and authority of disabilities. It will provide a very welcome contribution to several disciplines through its fresh, brilliant, and new insights on texts that have been the subject of study for centuries.”

Lindsey Row-Heyveld

Crip Authority is an exceptional piece of scholarship and will become a foundational text in both early modern studies and disability studies. This is a book that will launch hundreds of other books, and its insights will ignite ideas within and beyond academia.”

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