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Disability Pride: Dispatches from a Post-ADA World

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A disabled journalist documents how the “ADA Generation” has grown up, the rise of neurodiversity, impact of identity politics and representation, and the state of a disability rights and justice agenda


Weaving together interviews with reportage, Disability Pride traces the evolution of societal attitudes and activist agendas around disability from a fight for civil rights to a celebration of identity and heritage.


Since the American with Disabilities Act (ADA) passed over thirty years ago, changes can be seen everywhere—wheelchair ramps, braille signs and menus, public transit lifts, closed captioning on TVs, "reasonable accommodations" by employers such as flextime and telecommuting, and myriad other measures. People under 30 have not lived in a world without the expectation that disabled people should fully participate in society. Journalist Ben Mattlin demonstrates how a new generation of young people and disabled activists have made diversity and inclusiveness hallmarks of today’s social justice movements and modern media. From a giant Times Square billboard featuring disabled model Jillian Mercado to paraplegic actor and singer Ali Stroker becoming the first wheelchair-using performer ever to win a Tony, the world is ready to see, even to celebrate, nontraditional images of beauty.


Mattlin explores how this new wave of disability visibility and pride is furthering the cause of disability justice. Today, activists are fighting for long-term personal-assistance services and for mental-health support systems and it's coming from a broad spectrum of disability perspectives. Although this new generation of activism may be different from the protest actions of previous generations, Disability Pride demonstrates how to fearlessly push the movement forward.

264 pages, Hardcover

First published November 15, 2022

49 people are currently reading
3061 people want to read

About the author

Ben Mattlin

7 books26 followers

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5 stars
133 (41%)
4 stars
129 (40%)
3 stars
49 (15%)
2 stars
5 (1%)
1 star
1 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews
Profile Image for Shomeret.
1,120 reviews256 followers
June 20, 2022
Disability Pride by Ben Mattlin was a book that I downloaded from Edelweiss, which provides digital copies of books in advance of publication. Mattlin's book is scheduled to be published in November 2022. I feel privileged to have read it early.

I thought this was an interesting and insightful book, though I sometimes had a hard time figuring out what Mattlin intended to say.

For my complete review see https://shomeretmasked.blogspot.com/2...
Profile Image for Emily.
624 reviews5 followers
December 14, 2022
There's a lot to learn in here, but I got bogged down by the endless names of organizations, legislation, activists, bloggers, court cases, protests, etc. Disability Visibility is a better read for this content IMO.
Profile Image for Megan Ambuske.
101 reviews1 follower
May 1, 2023
4.5 stars, should be required reading for healthcare professionals
127 reviews8 followers
September 26, 2023
The author ends the book with a disclosure of how while writing this book he learned a lot about the disability community and sadly that showed during the entire book. It read very basic, as someone just starting to explore what other books like Care Work have such a better understanding of. It made it difficult to enjoy sadly.
Profile Image for Bryan.
2 reviews2 followers
January 16, 2023
I love this new book. I think everyone in the disabled community should read it. It is aimed at updating No Pity, also an essential text to read.
Profile Image for Jeffrey Pedro.
123 reviews6 followers
August 19, 2023
Mattlin’s Disability Pride is another piece that is vital in the decolonization process. This book examines the history of disability activism and the various legislature that have impacted the community both positively and negatively. It also highlights many people within the community and their lived experience. The American Disability Act of 1990 was passed to allow protections for people with disabilities. Although it’s been a little over 30 years since its passing, much progress is still needed to make the community’s livelihood equitable. Mattlin truly understands the legacy of colonialism (white supremacy) and how it has built institutions and enforced dysfunctional policies that have oppressed not only his community, but those of other marginalized groups. 👏👏👏
Profile Image for Lynsey Nicole.
142 reviews3 followers
January 27, 2023
Mattlin crams lots of important history as well as current issues with how society (media, movies/television, legislation, places of employment, fashion industry, just to name a few areas) views and treats disabled people. I appreciate how he acknowledges his privilege as a white man and makes space for anecdotes and quotes by many other intersections (BIPOC, LGBTQIA+) of disabled people.

I would definitely recommend this book to those wanting to gain deeper perspective of Disability issues and Justice post-ADA, and to chip away at ableist biases.

4 stars because I learned a lot and the content is strong, but it is A LOT of information to follow.
Profile Image for Kelly Fitzpatrick.
Author 197 books8 followers
September 17, 2023
Really great book.

Pretty comprehensive history of disability laws and iconic moments/ people in US history surrounding disability justice.

Would recommend to anyone looking into DJ.
Profile Image for Slay All Day.
186 reviews4 followers
November 30, 2022
A great historiography of the ADA movement. Would like to have seen more attention paid to non-physical/non-neurological disabilities as well, but all in all a great read.
Profile Image for Sarah.
1,730 reviews105 followers
April 1, 2023
3.5 stars. I am a new member of the disability community, and was reticent to use that label before. But recently, learning more about chronic illness and neurodiversity, and now with this book, I'm... maybe not comfortable, but less uncomfortable.

The author is upfront that, although disabled, he has privileges as a cis, straight, white, middle-aged man; there are occasional observations in which he reflects on how his experience has been different, or reflects on the intersectionality/ies affecting others in the community. Additionally, the author emphasizes early in the book that his intention is to center the voices of disabled people of other backgrounds. Space in the book is mostly given to disabled women, People of Color, and LGBTQ+ people, from whom he quotes heavily. Way to go for allyship!

The book gives a good history of the disability movement-- almost all of it new to me-- and then goes on to give examples of some recent developments, such as representation in media, leadership, government, and more. This is a great resource for anyone newly-disabled (it's a minority group you can join, or may be forced into, at anytime), or with a disabled family member or friend. Also consider reading for anyone working on equity practices at work.

The only thing that I'd suggest to the author/editor for future editions or similar books is: the author includes so many unique and well-qualified voices from the disabled community, but in an effort to include every relevant fact, a lot of sentences get bogged down. A very generic example would be: [Name], [position 1], [prior occupation 2], [credential 3], [award 4], and [award 5], [begin quotation]. Future editions might highlight the referenced person's most recent or most important qualification in text and list the rest of the details in a footnote. (A footnote, never a chapter-endnote or a book-endnote!)

Physical ARC that maybe I picked up last spring at PLA, or maybe it came in the mail sometime?
Profile Image for Amy.
2,989 reviews605 followers
October 25, 2023
I think I picked this one up with the wrong expectations. For some reason (perhaps because of the person who recommended it to me?) I thought it was going to be about the legal and legislative battles that brought forth the ADA. Which it is...kind of.
It is also a look at the history of autism, recent right to die legislation, increased exposure to disabled models via the internet, portrayal in the media, use of language, etc.
The book is very careful with its language and highlighting different intersectional identities of the people referenced within its pages. The book mentions the difficulty in defining disabilities, but never provides a definition. In some ways, the point is that it would be impossible to without leaving something out. But I think the lack of definition also made it difficult to fully grasp what the call is here. Expansion of the ADA? More legislation? More TV shows focusing on characters with disabilities?
I also found this book frustrating because in general, it engages very little with counter-arguments. Maybe that is just my lawyer brain. But I would find myself with a whole list of questions about 'the other side of that argument' that would go entirely unacknowledged. I suppose the response would be that this book isn't for airing 'the other side.' It is more descriptive than proscriptive. But at the same time, it does much more than describe life for those with disabilities. It openly criticizes certain policies and praises others. Without engaging with counter-claims, it loses an opportunity to really hone in why some policies are worth praise and others are not.
Overall, besides a general awareness, I feel like the book missed an opportunity to make a sustained argument. It was, however, informative and I feel like I have a better understanding and starting point in discussing these issues.
Profile Image for Allison Brenneise.
209 reviews2 followers
November 6, 2023
4.0 stars -- This book gives a (mostly) overview of the disability community. Chapters or parts that I think my friends would want to really look closely at would be Chapter 5 - neurodiversity and autistic self-advocacy, chapter 8 - politics of beauty, chapter 9 - casting and miscasting, and chapters 11 -health care disparities, chapter 13 - easy to get in [but] impossible to get out. The authors tells of many disability activists that are already on our radar (including TL) but mentions many others I had never heard of or knew very little about. It was nice to see communication and disability scholars Beth Haller get quoted fairly extensively as well as Margaret Quinlan & Benjamin Bates. Even Sky Cubaacub gets as decent mention. The book took a while for me to get through -- it was a little drier than other books on this topic.
Profile Image for Susan.
1,555 reviews25 followers
February 2, 2023
I randomly picked this up off the library New Arrivals shelf, and it was an excellent choice. Mattlin makes the point that there is a whole generation of disabled people who have grown up after the ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act) was enacted, and they *expect* that they have a right to education, to accessible buildings, to work, and more in a way that the previous generation didn’t because that used to be the fight. Particularly having been included in the education system from childhood, the younger generation is now primed to be activists in a whole new way, fighting for acceptance, visibility, services, and more through all areas of culture and community. This book is well organized, readable, and relevant for absolutely everyone.
2 reviews
April 26, 2023
I loved this read. I savored this inclusive and thoughtful discussion of disability justice & disability pride — past and present. For weeks I’ve recounted to anyone who would listen, examples of when Mattlin embraced opportunities to discuss the intersectionality of movements and identities.

I even more appreciated the really thoughtful explanation of the disability community POV of things like the right to die movement. Overall, as an allistic person I felt included and seen, and as an American I feel informed and empowered to contribute more to this movement. More leaders to listen to and follow, more policies to watch and support. I feel really lucky to have read this and to have added to my awareness.
72 reviews
didn-t-finish
January 9, 2025
The first chapter opens with discussion of disabled celebrities, then goes on to mention disabled politicians, and the oscars. There's a strong sense of exceptionalism, that disabled people are valuable because so many of us have achieved success under capitalism, rather than the truth: disabled people are valuable simply because we exist, just like all other people.

The author also uses the term "deformities", rather than the respectful "differences", when describing people's appearance.

Other chapters may be better, but I'm just not interested in spending my limited time on a book that seems to push assimilation.
Profile Image for Marissa (Bookish City Gal).
245 reviews3 followers
February 7, 2023
3.5 stars rounded up. The subject of this book is interesting to me as I’ve spent my career working with individuals with varying disabilities and wanting to learn more about their experiences. This book covers quite a lot in a fairly short book but I felt at times some of the chapter messages got lost with the frequent quotes and name drops. I couldn’t tell you even a handful of the names I read about because there were so many. I would have also appreciated hearing more about this author’s own experiences with the ADA.
112 reviews1 follower
March 19, 2023
Get used to it!

When, in college in the mid-Seventies, I chose to write a Politics of Education project suggesting that schools for the disabled be subject to community control--a big issue at the time--and that the appropriate "community" was disabled adults, not parents, my proposal was treated as speculative fiction.
I'm thrilled to learn that the community has developed leaders and that many disabled people no longer find the closet or institution an appropriate place. Loud and proud, they will be making decisions as to their own futures.
Profile Image for Susan.
980 reviews75 followers
September 11, 2023
This felt like a good companion for Neurotribes since I kept that one wanting more stories of self advocates and I feel like this one filled this gap a little better.

Unfortunately, as long as Neurotribes had been, I found it somehow more readable. This one got a bit dense. It's at its best focusing on individual stories. I was particularly moved by the section discussing the Nancy Cruzan and Terri Schiavo controversies which I remembered from my childhood. It really made me rethink a lot of misconceptions I've had about the "right to die" movement and some of its agendas.
Profile Image for seo.
135 reviews141 followers
March 21, 2024
i came to this book, wanting to learn more about the history of the disability justice movement, and i got exactly what i asked for. mattlin discusses the history behind certain policies and organizations, changes and transitions in the disability justice movement, and notable figures in the movement such as mia mingus, eli clare, leah piepzna-samarasinha, etc. it's a good starting place if you want to know more about the history and to find specific figures to look into, but the book doesn't delve as much into theory and praxis.
Profile Image for Stuart.
83 reviews1 follower
April 17, 2023
One of the most comprehensive surveys of what it means to be disabled in the twenty first century. One of the few books I’ve read recently to cover the golden era of disability right in depth and nuance, while also covering the latest on disability justice and it’s champions. Would only wish that, on balance, we could spend more time on disability pride (vs disability history and issues survey.
Profile Image for Shannon.
491 reviews10 followers
May 2, 2023
Despite the fact that I am not really a non-fiction girlie most days, I got through this informative and important work pretty quickly. The author is very clear to point out his own privilege as a straight cis man and does a great job including stories, quotes, and research from folks across the spectrums of gender, sexuality, and ability. I learned a lot and have a lot of reflecting to do regarding my own privilege and responsibility to the disabled community as someone in the marketing field.
Profile Image for Heather - Just Geeking By.
499 reviews83 followers
July 10, 2023
I chose to stop reading this one as I made a mistake, and didn't stop to realise that a book mentioning the ADA would be US based. As a British disabled person this was an interesting read but not relevant to me. While the first few chapters gave me a better insight into the system my American friends have to work within, I have limited energy due to my ME/CFS and this isn't an easy read. It's a good book, it's just not for me.
Profile Image for Ellen Simon.
264 reviews3 followers
July 15, 2024
there's a lot to learn from this book, but i felt like i wasn't able to fully process everything Ben Mattlin was saying because he name dropped SO MANY organizations, legislations, activists, bloggers, court cases, protests, etc. overall this is a pretty comprehensive history of disability laws and iconic moments/ people in US history surrounding disability justice and i did learn a lot! just took some rereading to get there
Profile Image for Rebekah Palmer.
Author 5 books23 followers
Read
September 15, 2024
Excellent overview about disability as a cultural identity: it links to a group of humans with shared history, similar sets of experiences, sociopolitical concerns, and a message to the world.

The book is written in three sections of essays: ADA generation grows up, presentation and representation, and the continuing evolution of disability activism.

A perfect addition to disability studies and the general public knowledge of disability history in the USA!
Profile Image for Dan Castrigano.
246 reviews6 followers
September 22, 2024
Good. I read it over the course of about a month so have forgotten a lot of it now that I'm done. I appreciated Mattlin's focus on invisible disabilities. It was also good to read about "disability spokespeople" and how they're predominantly white cisgender males with more "socially acceptable" disabilities, like having one leg or one arm. Mattlin discussed how leaders in the disability justice movement should have more intersectional identities.
Profile Image for Madalynn.
681 reviews5 followers
July 27, 2023
I rated Disability Pride 4/5 stars. Content warning for medical abuse, graphic descriptions, and related topics. I learned a lot from this book and would recommend it. There is, however, a lot of information in a short period of time. There were a lot of names, diagnoses, employment/activism history, and I don't think I remember most of the people described in this book which is a shame because I know they all did incredible work. I liked how the book was arranged, I thought it was a logical progression after establishing some of the baseline knowledge that readers might not have had ahead of time.
104 reviews
November 7, 2023
Policies involving the Disabled Community and Disabled Rights have changed mainly with the Passing of a Landmark Legislation, the ADA, in 1990. Over time, esp in the past two-three decades, Public view and acceptance of Disabled in the Mainstream Media have shifted significantly. Mattlin questions how this has been possible.
Profile Image for Dexia.
89 reviews
July 31, 2025
3 ⭐️

DNF

This book is good, like, really good and insightful. I’m not in the mood for it rn, but i’ve read a lot of it and am going to continue to pick out chapters and read them. Even going to have book club read some passages and poems from it — i just am simply not in the mood for this sort of contemporary nonfiction at the moment.
Profile Image for Adri.
11 reviews
August 9, 2025
Disability Pride is just alright. Mattlin wrote a literary analysis from several disability advocates on ADA, fashion, institutionalization, and visibility.

If you know little to nothing about disability Pride, this book is a great starting place. But if you’re familiar with the concept, there are other books that approach the topic with more nuance and care.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 47 reviews

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