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Ashley Shew: Against Technoableism (2023, Norton & Company, Incorporated, W. W.) 4 stars

Useful and important book for the right audience

4 stars

Shew shows how technoableism, the goal of using technology to "fix" disabled people is intertwined with the flawed Medical Model of disability and with eugenics. She deftly interweaves her own personal experience with the overall cause of disability justice.

Her chapters on amputees and autistic folks are especially detailed and enlightening.

Although I was already familiar with the Medical and Social Models of disability, I think this book could serve as a good intro to these ideas, for a reader who doesn't mind wading through a bit of jargon and heady discussion. I wouldn't recommend the book to my right-wing friends due to the author's left-wing orientation being on full display. But for a reader already in political agreement with the author, this book could be a good way to argue for the rights of disabled people, and for caution when dealing with those who frame groups of people as a problem, and then want to engineer and sell a solution.