Cheap Talk
Disability and the Politics of Communication
Abstract
In Cheap Talk: Disability and the Politics of Communication, Joshua St. Pierre flips the script on communication disability, positioning the unruly, disabled speaker at the center of analysis to challenge the belief that more communication is unquestionably good. Working with Gilles Deleuze’s suggestion that “[w]e don’t suffer these days from any lack of communication, but rather from all the forces making us say things when we’ve nothing much to say,” St. Pierre brings together the unlikely trio of the dysfluent speaker, the talking head, and the troll to show how speech is made cheap—and produced and repaired within human bodies—to meet the inhuman needs of capital. The book explores how technologies, like social media and the field of speech-language pathology, create smooth sites of contact that are exclusionary for disabled speakers and looks to the political possibilities of disabled voices to “de-face” the power of speech now entwined with capital.
Keywords
stuttering, dysfluency, fluency, speech, talking heads, trolls, communication, communication disability, disability, information society, neoliberalism, Cynics, critical disability studies, parrhesia, political theory, noise, therapy, Speech-Language Pathology, social media, Deleuze, FoucaultDOI
10.3998/mpub.12158924ISBN
9780472905904, 9780472905904, 9780472075348, 9780472055340, 9780472220144Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2022Series
Corporealities: Discourses Of Disability,Classification
Society and culture: general
Disability: social aspects
Media studies
Political structure and processes


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