References
- was another record-breaking year for federal ADA Title III lawsuits. ADA Title III: News & Insights. February 20, 2020. https://www.adatitleiii.com/2020/02/2019-was-another-record-breaking-year-for-federal-ada-title-iii-lawsuits/
- Ahlvik-Harju, C. (2020). The personal is theological is political is poetical. Syndicate: https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- Barnes, E. (2016). The minority body: A theory of disability. Oxford University Press.
- Brock, B. (2012). Augustine’s hierarchies of human wholeness and their healing. In B. Brock and J. Swinton (Eds.), Disability in the Christian tradition: A reader (65–78). Eerdmans.
- Brock, B. (2019). Wondrously wounded: Theology, disability, and the body of Christ. Baylor University Press.
- Brock, B. (2020a). Response to Frances Young. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- Brock, B. (2020b). Response to Miguel Romero. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- Brock, B. (2020c). Response to Carolin Ahlvik-Harju. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- Cone, J. H. (2004). Theology’s great sin: Silence in the face of white supremacy. Black Theology, 2(2), 139–152. https://doi.org/10.1558/blth.2.2.139.36027
- Cone, J. H. (2010). A black theology of liberation. 40th Anniversary ed. Orbis Books.
- Dolmage, J. T. (2017). Academic ableism: Disability and higher education. University of Michigan Press.
- Frost, G. (2020). Medieval Aristotelians on cognitive disabilities and their early modern critics. In S. M. Williams (Ed.), Disability in medieval Christian philosophy and theology (pp. 51–79). Routledge.
- Haslanger, S. (2017). Culture and critique. Aristotelian Society, 91(1), 149–173. https://doi.org/10.1093/arisup/akx001
- IDEA data brief: written state complaints. CADRE (2017, September). https://www.cadreworks.org/sites/default/files/resources/WSC%20Brief_WebFinal_9.2017.pdf
- Just the facts: Americans with Disabilities Act. (2018, July 12). United States Courts. https://www.uscourts.gov/news/2018/07/12/just-facts-americans-disabilities-act
- Kittay, E. F. (2010). The personal is philosophical is political: A philosopher and mother of a cognitively disabled person sends notes from the battlefield. In E. F. Kittay and L. Carlson (Eds.), Cognitive disability and its challenge to moral philosophy (pp. 393–413). Wiley-Blackwell.
- Lindemann, H. (2014). Holding and letting god: The social practice of personal identities. Oxford University Press.
- McFarland, I. (2020). Evil, wonder, and chance. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- McMaster, C., and Whiburn, B. (Eds.). (2019). Disability and the university: A disabled students’ manifesto. Peter Lang.
- Panchuk, M. (2020). That we may be whole: Doing philosophy of religion with the whole self. In B. Hereth and K. Timpe (Eds.), The lost sheep: New perspectives on disability, gender, race, and animals (pp. 55–76). Routledge.
- Reynolds, J. M., & Timpe, K. (Forthcoming). Disability and knowing: On social epistemology’s ableism problem. In J. Lackey and A. McGlynn (Eds.), The Oxford handbook of social epistemology. Oxford University Press.
- Romero, M. (2020). Disability, theological method, and authorial positionality. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/
- Shapiro, J. P. (1993). No pity: People with disabilities forging a new civil rights movement. Random House.
- Sinclair, J. (1993). Don’t mourn for us. Our Voice, 1(3), 1–4.
- Thurman, H. (1976). Jesus and the disinherited. Beacon Press.
- Timpe, K., & Yancey, H. (Forthcoming). Disability and suffering. In T&T Clark companion to suffering and the problem of evil.
- Timpe, K. (2014). This is water and religious self-deception. In R. K. Bolger and S. Korb (Eds.), Gesturing toward reality: David Foster Wallace and philosophy (pp. 53–68). Bloomsbury.
- Timpe, K. (2018). Disability and inclusive communities. Calvin Press.
- Timpe, K. (2020). Defiant afterlife: Disability and uniting ourselves to God. In M. Panchuk and M. Rea (Eds.), Voices from the edge: Centring marginalized perspectives in analytic theology (pp. 206–231). Oxford University Press.
- Timpe, K. (Forthcoming). Disability in history, disability in eschatology. In J. Cockayne and M. Mallary (Eds.), Philosophical engagements with N.T. Wright: History and epistemology. Routledge.
- Verkerk, M. (2015). Review of Holding and letting go: The social practice of personal identities. Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. https://ndpr.nd.edu/news/holding-and-letting-go-the-social-practice-of-personal-identities/
- Walker Grimes, K. (2017). Christ divided: Antiblackness as corporate vice. Fortress Press.
- Young, F. (2020). The hour of glory: Putting wonder at the heart of theodicy. Syndicate. https://syndicate.network/symposia/theology/wondrously-wounded/