Description

The thesis represented here was for my Honors undergraduate thesis project, which explored the social stigma of disability and its representational differences between congenital and acquired disability within the user comments in an online forum of discussion. Existing literature on

The thesis represented here was for my Honors undergraduate thesis project, which explored the social stigma of disability and its representational differences between congenital and acquired disability within the user comments in an online forum of discussion. Existing literature on Critical Disability Studies and Rehabilitative Psychology has noted the nature of disability stigma and lack of accurate representation in social settings as well as the ramifications that follow. (Mis)representations of disability can result in bias, inaccessibility, and other social ramifications such as microaggressions because of the long history of oppression and stigmatization that disabled individuals have experienced (Keller & Galgay, 2010). Data was collected from two online forums addressing disability stigma and analyzed using both deductive coding and inductive emergent analysis of recurrent themes, experiences, or ideas that were expressed in user comments. Analysis of user comments helped address the goal of this research which aimed to explore stigma, identity, and disability within a representational context. This thesis, then, wanted to better understand disability stigma by analyzing the representational differences (if any) of congenital and acquired disabled user’s comments.

Reuse Permissions
  • 498.77 KB application/pdf

    Download restricted. Please sign in.
    Restrictions Statement

    Barrett Honors College theses and creative projects are restricted to ASU community members.

    Download count: 1

    Details

    Title
    • The Social Stigma of Disability Representation: A Qualitative Thematic Analysis of Representational Differences Between Congenital and Acquired Disability
    Contributors
    Date Created
    2023-05
    Resource Type
  • Text
  • Machine-readable links