Abstract

This article examines how disability and sexuality are represented in today’s Russian media, and how disabled people navigate these understandings. Drawing on online storytelling and first person stories about sexuality told by disabled people in the public sphere, the article provides a qualitative account of people with disabilities, journalists and civil rights advocates, analyzing how contemporary Russians with disabilities narrate their own lives in public forums. The focus of their stories, as well as the accounts of eyewitnesses, volunteers in the institutions, is on the constraints and limits of sexuality and intimacy spheres imposed by the professionals, families and wider society. This article also interprets the narratives behind disabled people’s sexuality circulating in contemporary Russia through digital networks, in combination with qualitative data from primary sources: disability activists and two journalists with and without disability in Moscow. It is argued that the telling of these stories in a public forum is a political act. In personal stories about sexual, bodily experiences told in the interviews or autobiographical texts, self-presentations and discussions in social networks, the voices of people are heard, permitting emancipation from previous categories. However, disability always remains with them, playing an important role in social lives of these people and in their sexual experiences and identities, becoming the cornerstone of the personal and collective re-defining of themselves. Using ideas of “visibility politics” (Arendt), queer/crip kinship and intimate citizenship (Plummer), the authors demonstrate how someone might choose to speak publicly about a topic and how this understanding develops cultural understandings of contemporary Russia.

Highlights

  • “When I put on a colored prosthesis, children come up to me on the street: for them I am a superhero

  • Using ideas of queer/crip kinship and intimate citizenship we draw on online storytelling and first-person stories about sexuality told by disabled people in the public sphere to demonstrate how someone might choose to speak publicly about the topic and how these narratives reflect cultural understandings of sexuality in contemporary Russia

  • To explore how the politics of representation of sexuality and disability is cocreated through online media storytelling and self-reflected in personal stories and activist narratives, we examined media storytelling articles published by Russian online media on behalf of disabled people who write on the topic of sexuality (“Wonderzine”, “Meduza”, “Takie dela”, “Neinvalid.ru”, “Miloserdie.ru”, 2016–2019)

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Summary

Introduction

“When I put on a colored prosthesis, children come up to me on the street: for them I am a superhero. Tatiana Demianova, whose words are quoted in the popular weekly newspaper “Argumenty i facty” (Ivanushkina 2018), is a head IT engineer at Sberbank, one of the largest banks in the country, as well as an athlete, fashion model, writer and motivational speaker Her appearances in mass media, Facebook and Instagram is usually followed by bright and beautiful photo images and always contain a political statement about overcoming stigma, dismantling taboo, and building solidarity. Using ideas of queer/crip kinship and intimate citizenship we draw on online storytelling and first-person stories about sexuality told by disabled people in the public sphere to demonstrate how someone might choose to speak publicly about the topic and how these narratives reflect cultural understandings of sexuality in contemporary Russia

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