“I Have Learnt These Things by Myself, Because I Always Thought That I Must Overcompensate for My Disability”: Learning to Perform Dis/abled Identity in Social Media

Authors

  • Nomy Bitman The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Keywords:

social media, social learning, disability performance, disability studies, disability media studies, stutterers, hard-of-hearing, autistics

Abstract

Learning how to perform an identity in social media is a complex, two-stage process: lifelong environmental learning through socialization and acculturation mediated by self-comparison to others, and the transformation of this learned information into personal knowledge about how to develop one’s identity online. However, disability performance complicates this learning process through oppressive able-bodied medicalization, especially of concealable communicative disabilities. Based on 31 in-depth interviews with autistics, stutterers, and hard-of-hearing users, and 7 social media documentation diaries, this article provides a comprehensive perspective that presents dis/ability performances as a product of powerful learning aspects that involve both disability-related and “able-bodied” dimensions of learning. Although individuals learn how to deal with social media violence regardless of their disabilities, social, cultural, and technical learning of how to be a disabled person in the world dramatically influences dis/ability performances and perpetuates the complexity of performing a disabled self.

Author Biography

Nomy Bitman, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem

Nomy Bitman is a PhD candidate at the department of communication and Journalism at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem. Her research interests include critical disability theory and its various intersections with social media, as well as critical examinations of communication, body, and identity.

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Published

2023-02-26

Issue

Section

Articles