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Lookup NU author(s): Dr Aditi NafdeORCiD
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This chapter surveys heterogenous lived experiences of disability throughout medieval Afro-Eurasian travel networks, examining examples from approximately the seventh through fifteenth centuries CE. It uses a broadly comparative approach to ‘religiomedical’ modes of understanding disability, illness, and other conditions, which situate the analysis of lived experience within local sociocultural understandings of the body (namely religious frameworks or historical forms of medical knowledge). Surveying disparate medieval first-person accounts of temporary or lifelong disability across Asia, Africa, and Europe, this chapter attends to disability as an adaptive practice and a venue for world transformation: an opening up of possibility, and an intellectual and artistic resource for people in motion.
Author(s): Nafde A
Editor(s): Sebastian Sobecki
Publication type: Book Chapter
Publication status: Published
Book Title: The Cambridge Guide to Global Medieval Travel Writing
Year: 2025
Pages: 127-149
Online publication date: 03/10/2025
Acceptance date: 24/10/2023
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Place Published: Cambridge
URL: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108642897.008
DOI: 10.1017/9781108642897.008
Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item
ISBN: 9781108642897