Citations:neuroqueering


 * 2018, Michael S. Jeffress, International Perspectives on Teaching with Disability: Overcoming Obstacles and Enriching Lives, Routledge (ISBN 9781351584616)
 * Many in society expect neurodivergent people to “pass” as neurotypical (e.g., non-autistic, non-dyslexic, non-depressed). But the act of neuroqueering is ...
 * 2020, Stephanie Jenkins, Kelly Struthers Montford, Chloë Taylor, Disability and Animality: Crip Perspectives in Critical Animal Studies, Routledge (ISBN 9781000051605)
 * Or maybe this performativity could be considered “neuroqueering,” a concept coined by Nick Walker and Athena Lynn Michaels-Dillon, which they describe as ...
 * 2020, Jilly Boyce Kay, Gender, Media and Voice: Communicative Injustice and Public Speech, Springer Nature (ISBN 9783030472870), page 175:
 * I believe in the potentialities of autistic stories and gestures, of neuroqueering what we&#39;ve come to understand as language and being. (Yergeau 2018, p.
 * 2020, Renée Fox, Mike Cronin, Brian Ó Conchubhair, Routledge International Handbook of Irish Studies, Routledge (ISBN 9781000333152)
 * “Neuroqueering Ireland.” Queering Ireland 2019: Queer Intersections/Queer Abilities, September 27–28, 2019, Kingsburg, Nova Scotia. Conference.