Bodies
in Revolt argues that
the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) could humanize capitalism
by turning employers into care-givers,
creating an ethic of care in
the workplace. Unlike other
feminists, Ruth O'Brien bases
her ethics not on benevolence,
but rather on self-preservation.
She relies on Deleuze and Guattari's
interpretation of Spinoza and
Foucault's conception of corporeal
resistance to show how a workplace
ethic that is neither communitarian
nor individualistic can be
based upon the rallying cry "one
for all and all for one."
O'Brien contends that, to instigate such a revolt, disability must be viewed
as an integral part of life, an ever-evolving, indeed, almost universal aspect
of the human condition. This recognition transforms the ADA from a narrow civil
rights law into the most revolutionary labor/civil rights law that the United
States has ever seen. Its employment provisions would do nothing less than undercut
capitalism by making employers provide reasonable accommodations on the basis
of human needs instead of profits. Accommodating one person sets precedents for
all. Absent a divide between individual rights and collective action, persons
with disabilities become Foucauldian agents of resistance or "bodies in revolt," undermining
the standardization and dehumanization of the post-Fordist political economy.
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