Rethinking disability in India, by Anita Ghai, New Delhi, Routledge,
2015, 392 pp., £95.00 (hardback), ISBN 978-1-13-802029-0 Peter Fremlin
Independent [email protected]
Published online: 01 Sep 2016
http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/09687599.2016.1221665
National or regional studies of disability offer an important
opportunity to understand historical, social and cultural aspects of
disability, as well as being a way to use the perspective of
disability to better understand the region itself. When they come from
the Global South, these studies also offer an important opportunity to
question theoretical and international frameworks. The position of
India is particularly interesting in terms of its size and diversity
of cultures, languages and development. Its regional position means
that studies here are also relevant to Bangladesh, Pakistan and other
neighbouring countries. As well as its diversity, India is going
through rapid social and economic change and capturing the
intersection of these changes with disability is as important as it is
challenging.

Rethinking Disability in India by Anita Ghai is an important
contribution to understanding the lives of disabled people in India,
to disability theory and to a range of social issues within India.
Ghai’s work is frank and personal, building on her own biography to
ask the ‘most critical questions’ (16) and to deconstruct theoretical
divisions. With her extensive scholarship, she brings a mass of
evidence in historical, social, policy and analytical terms to
understanding disability in India and its relation with different
sectors. India gives a rich tapestry to show the multiplicity of the
disability experience, and this is one of the key contributions of her
book.

Starting out with Ghai’s biography and cultural background of
disability within India, the book establishes the range of dimensions
relevant to disability, ranging from life trajectory, religious texts,
social attitudes and practices to spiritual values. Following on from
this Ghai explores official and unofficial identifications of who is
disabled, and the marginalisation of disabled lives in India. The
second half of the book builds on this beginning by exploring the ways
in which disability raises questions on the right to life, and the
final three chapters deal with the theoretical contexts of disability,
disability identity and, finally, the place of disability studies.

Throughout her work Ghai is using diverse sources and epistemologies,
ranging from psychological introspection to accounts of personal
experiences, policies across Indian institutions, perspectives of
activists and a range of academic sources from disability studies and
beyond. As such the book is addressed to many audiences – academics
inside and outside India, practitioners and activists within and
beyond the disability movement, and anyone who might have an interest
in the Indian subcontinent. She asserts the social model of disability
and its important and relevance to disabled people and a wide range of
social issues, at the same time as questioning and interrogating its
utility.

Particularly important is her treatment of gender, which is
characteristic of the way she uses this range of perspectives to
‘rethink’ disability in India. Bringing out different concerns and
experiences of disabled women asserts the multiplicity of disability
and its multiple relevance to wider concerns. The engagement with
gender, and women’s movements, brings questions to our perceptions on
disability, new dimensions for conceptions and engagements on gender
issues, and a thoughtful reflection on meaningful inclusion through
identity politics. In this and many other areas her work is full of
insights and analysis on how different areas and sources of knowledge
can be linked.

The ambition and the scope of the work are vast: to embody the
theoretician, practitioner and activist; to engage with western
academia, Indian history and disabled people’s lives; and to write
simultaneously for academics in the Global North as well as grassroots
activists. As a result, this book should be seen as a contribution to
a process of rethinking and reconnecting many issues related to
disability and India. It is a considerable and valuable foundation for
future work in a range of areas.

Two areas in particular struck me as ripe for further exploration.

First, the rapid changes in Indian society and economy and the new
hi-tech India. Globalisation is presented in terms of its ‘dark face’
(133) and negative consequences for disabled people. But multinational
companies in India have also taken initiatives for disability
inclusion; there are new understandings of disability; and there are
opportunities and risks for disabled people. Michele Friedner’s work
on emerging deaf culture and community in urban India is an important
contribution that should be explored further.

Secondly, as a practitioner myself, I did wonder whether such a deep
rethinking of disability would lead to different policy analysis and
recommendations. In many areas (especially inclusive education), Ghai
offers careful perspectives and critiques on current policy. But in
other areas the analysis does not seem taken to its conclusion. One
example of this is in terms of the important issues on understanding
disability: the chapter that deals with them ends with principles from
the United Nations’ Convention. This does not answer how to apply
these in the complex environment that was described. Part of the
challenge here is a challenge from the context of the disability
sector in India, which perhaps has not had the resources to think
these questions through to their end; as such it cannot be addressed
by one thinker alone.

Naturally, in a work of such scope that raises so many issues in a
detailed way, there are some further quibbles. Some of these would
have been fixed by more thorough editing, because there are
typographical errors in this edition. Also, in some places the volume
of information the author deals with ends up in verbosity, multi-page
paragraphs, and a difficulty in following the argument. This book is
intended for a wide audience, but unfortunately the density of its
prose may limit its appeal.

This book richly deserves this appeal, for readers in many different
places. Rethinking Disability in India is a resource, inspiration and
challenge to those interested in disability, identity politics and
policy, gender and/or South Asia.

Peter Fremlin
Independent Consultant
[email protected]
© 2016 Peter Fremlin

-- 
Avinash Shahi
Doctoral student at Centre for Law and Governance JNU


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