Mad, Maddened, and Maddening: A Mad Duoethnographic Exploration of Undergraduate Education
Keywords:
Disability; Mental Health; Distress; Mad Studies; DuoethnographyAbstract
Higher education is known to be a hostile environment towards mad(dened) and disabled students, faculty, and staff, who experience high amounts of discrimination, exclusion, and epistemic and institutional violence (Shanouda, 2019). As two activist/scholars with experiences teaching and learning within mad(dening) higher education conditions, we are committed to activism and critique in higher education that cultivates affirming conditions for mad(dened) students through disruptions of the ableist and sanist status quo in higher education. Through a duoethnographic approach (Sawyer & Norris, 2012) that emphasizes the tenets of Pinar’s (1994) currere—which involves an autobiographical exploration of one’s personal experiences within education—this article explores three themes pertaining to undergraduate education: (a) Mad identity, (b) maddened subjectivities, and (c) maddening higher education. We explore these themes through personal and intimate co-writing, with a specific focus on our encounters and learnings with and from mad community, the currently maddened state of neoliberal higher education, and our desire to promote a political maddening of higher education. While distilling these themes, we also advocate for their interconnections and weave our life histories teaching and learning in undergraduate education specifically. Throughout our duoethnographic writing, we strive to critique and disrupt the currently exclusionary conditions of undergraduate education while politicizing madness as an identity and coalitional community. We end by providing recommendations for how higher education can create more affirming learning conditions for undergraduate students while creating space mad community and activism.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
There are no article processing or submission charges for CJDS authors.
Author(s) are not required to assign their copyright in and to their article to the Canadian Journal of Disability Studies. Instead, The CJDS asks for one-time rights to print this original work.
All articles in the journal are assigned a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.

Authors are asked to contact the journal Editor if they wish to post the article on any website; translate or authorize a translation of the article; copy or otherwise reproduce the article, in any format, beyond what is permitted under Canadian copyright law, or authorize others to do so; copy or otherwise reproduce portions of the article, including tables and figures, beyond what is permitted under Canadian copyright law, or authorize others to do so.
Contacting the Editor will simply allow us to track the use and distribution of your article. We encourage use for non-commercial, educational purposes.
Authors must provide proof of permission clearance prior to the publication of their work if they are including images or other materials that are not their own. Keep in mind that such clearance can at times be costly, and often takes time. The journal editor can often work with you to seek permissions if you need information, advice or assistance.