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Half Title
Series Information
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Chapter 1 Foundations
1 Wandering Rocks
2 Representing Disabled Men in Modern Literature
3 Disability
4 Masculinity
5 Modernist Deformations
Chapter 2 Imperial Self and Sexual Other in D.H. Lawrence's Lady Chatterley's Lover
1 Feeling the Apocalypse
2 Male Corporeality and Female Power
2.1 Clifford's Disabled Body
2.2 Shifting Power Relations
2.3 The Power of Connie
3 The Thing Outside
3.1 Wholeness and Disintegration
3.2 Old England
3.3 Imperial Discomfort
3.4 Der Untergang des Abendlands
3.5 The East Is a Career
3.6 Colonizing the Body
3.7 Children and Futurity
4 Out of the Void
Chapter 3 Crip/Queer Corporeality in Ernest Hemingway's The Sun Also Rises
1 Jake's Joke Front
1.1 Brett's Female Masculinity
1.2 Postwar Masculinity
1.3 Shame and Concealment
2 The Disability Closet
2.1 Disability and (Homo)Sexuality
2.2 Jake as Homosexual
3 Jake's Crip/Queer Interventions
3.1 Coming Out Crip
3.2 The Closeted Narrator
3.3 Crip/Queer/Sex
4 Disability as a Creative Alternative Corporeality
5 It All Depends
Chapter 4 Extraordinary Minds and Interdependence in William Faulkner's The Sound and The Fury
1 A Tale Told by an Idiot
1.1 Eugenics, Buck v. Bell, and the Idiocy Debate
1.2 Understanding Benjy
2 Rereading Benjy Compson
2.1 He Been Three Years Old Thirty Years: Infantilization
2.2 They Making a Bluegum Out of You: Blackness
2.3 Disabling Reading
2.4 Idiocy and the Avant-Garde
3 The Compson Pathology
4 Getting Tenderness: Webs of Care
4.1 The Help: Race and Care Work
4.2 The Mother: Gender and Care Work
4.3 The Mammy: Race, Gender, and Care Work
5 (Inter)Dependencies.

5.1 Southern Masculinity and the Self-Made Man
5.2 Power and the Southern Woman
6 Obverse Reflections
Chapter 5 Conclusion
Works Cited
Index.

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