
Beautiful Lives: How We Got Learning Disabilities So Wrong
Unwin, Stephen More by this author...£14.99Paperback- History
- Social Justice
- Health Politics & Disability Justice
- Disability
- Social & Cultural History
- Inequality
For much of history, people with learning disabilities have been regarded as unworthy of interest - often seen as a threat to the social order and sometimes dismissed as barely human. While recent years have seen an improvement, learning-disabled people are still treated as fundamentally different.
Beautiful Lives is a personal and pragmatic account, told through the eyes of a father whose son has severe learning disabilities. From early civilisation to the chilling realities of twentieth-century eugenics, this powerful book uncovers a startling and rarely told history - one deeply embedded in the challenges still faced today. Unwin shapes this history into a powerful story of love, lived experience and the long struggle for a better future.
'Both heart-rending and gorgeous. He teaches us humanity' MIRIAM MARGOLYES