Disentangling disablism and ableism: The social norm of being able and its influence on social interactions with people with intellectual disabilities
Georg Gappmayer
Abstract
Critical occupational science reveals mechanisms of social inequality and differences between humans. One category of human difference is ability and the social norm of being able. In this paper I propose a deeper understanding of occupations through exploring ableism—the social norm of being able—and disablism—an excluding behaviour towards people with disabilities. Within a postmodern understanding of knowledge, the aim of this paper is not to demonstrate how people with intellectual disabilities are categorized as different in Austrian society. Rather, the aim is to enable a discussion about the influences of the social norm of being able on occupations, and how people, as members of a society, produce differences between humans in social interactions, due to this social norm. Three ethnographic vignettes introduce this discussion paper. They tell stories of social interactions of a person with intellectual disabilities who visits Viennese cafés with me. In order to encourage a discussion, the paper invites readers to reflect for themselves about the initial vignettes and to criticise the interpretations proposed. My study offers a situational approach to how everyday interactions produce differences in humans. Further, it explores how ableism influences these interactions, and discusses how to challenge the naturalized social norm of being able. I suggest that it is not enough to claim more social inclusion for people with (intellectual) disabilities; the objective should be to investigate how occupations could be performed in a way that deconstructs normality and which supports and values deviance.