Abstract
To many disabled people, the pandemic creates a reversed society to imagine the social model of disability reconstructing ideals of ‘able’ or ‘normal’ within a disabling environment. Drawing on the in-depth interviews we conducted, this study reveals how disabled people have re-imagined a reversed society created by the pandemic on three levels: the re-imagined physical space of free access, the re-imagined mental space of the abled-self, and the re-imagined social space with equal rights, which indicates expectations for barrier-free environments, affirmation of disability identity, and institutional support through various approaches. The re-imagined social model attempts to conceptualize the nature of disability, with a more complex understanding of disability and disabling environment; additionally, it reveals how the ability of society to systematically and interrelatedly excluded disabled people throughout everyday lives. Meanwhile, the scholars advocate for concrete approaches to deconstruct structural inequalities for the expectations to be practicably applied.
Published Version
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