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(Love)Sick, disabled, and dying: Investigating the crip clock, gender, and resistance in Pessoa’s A Carta da corcunda para o serralheiro (c.1930)

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posted on 2025-11-06, 14:06 authored by Olivia Glaze
<p dir="ltr">This article discusses the portrayal of illness and disability in Fernando Pessoa’s <i>A carta da corcunda para o serralheiro</i> (<i>c.</i>1930) [<i>Letter from a Hunchback Girl to a Metalworker</i> (2001)] through a lens of critical disability studies. First, the article examines notions of time and productivity, presenting a version of ‘the crip clock’ that resists the heteronormative, capitalist, and able-bodied expectations placed on disabled presents and futurities. Second, the article explores the placement of the crip body outside cultures of desirability and love and discusses how alternative understandings of gender and a deprivileging of the anthropocentric experience can create more inclusive understandings of the disabled and/or unwell body. Overall, this article contends that the more expansive crip approaches towards time, the human body, and gender identity found within <i>A carta</i> should be considered strategies of resistance against the limiting constraints placed upon crip bodies by ableist norms and structures.</p>

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© 2025 the author(s). For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.

Rights Retention Status

  • Yes

Submission date

2024-08-31

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Liverpool University Press via the DOI in this record

Journal

Journal of Romance Studies

Volume

25

Issue

3

Pagination

509-530

Publisher

Liverpool University Press / Institute of Languages, Cultures and Societies

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2025-03-06T15:15:29Z

Department

  • Languages, Cultures and Visual Studies

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