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Distributed for Intellect Ltd

Heavy Metal and Disability

Crips, Crowds, and Cacophonies

A study of the distinctive relationship between metal and disability.

Persisting across metal’s subgenres is a preoccupation with exploring and questioning the boundary that divides the body that has agency from the body that has none. This boundary is one that is familiar to those for whom the agency of the body is an everyday matter of survival. While metal scholars who contribute to this collection see metal as a space of possibility, in which dis/ability and other intersectional identities can be validated and understood, the collection does not imply that the possibilities that metal affords are always actualized. This collection situates itself in a wider struggle to open up metal, challenging its power structures—a struggle in which metal studies has played a significant part.

Metal’s preoccupation with unleashing and controlling sensorial overload acts both as an analog of neurodiversity and as a space in which those who are neurodivergent find ways to understand and leverage their sensory capacities. Metal offers potent resources for the self-understanding of people with disabilities. It does not necessarily mean that this potential is always explored or that metal scenes are hospitable to those with disabilities. This collection is disability-positive, validating people with disabilities as different and not damaged.

192 pages | 9 halftones | 6.69 x 9.61 | © 2024

Advances in Metal Music and Culture

Culture Studies

Music: General Music


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Table of Contents

    Introduction




‘United We Never Shall Fall’: Metal and Disability




            Esther Clinton and Jeremy Wallach




Resonant Forms: Autistic Hearing and Heavy Metal Aesthetics




            Jon W. Fessenden




Fools Gather ‘Round to Watch Me Bleed: Disability, Isolation, and Participation in Metal’s Communities of Aesthetic Practice




            Rebecca Jiggens and Jasmine Hazel Shadrack




Disabled Drone: Trans-Feminist Noisecraft




             Steff Juniper




The Psychology of Metal Music, Culture, and Dis/Ability




             Kyle J. Messick




Neurodiversity and Heavy Metal Music




             Kate Quinn and Samantha Barton




‘Dis-ruptions: Heavy Metal Appropriations of Disability in Media’




              Eric Smialek and Samantha Bassler




Stimming in the Pit: How Autistic Heavy Metal Fans Have Remained Unseen




             Vik J. Squires




The Bone Ballet: An Examination in the Intersectionality of Metal, Ballet, and Disability




             Dawn States




Dis/Abling Narratives of Indigenous Bodies through Decolonial Metal Music in Latin America




             Nelson Varas Díaz and Daniel Nevárez Araújo




Goth Subculture, Neurodivergence, and the Dark Power of Changeling Narratives




             Kayley Whalen


   Notes on Contributors

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