Free Course: Foundations of Entrepreneurship for People with Disabilities at Syracuse University

‘Someone Falls Overboard’: University Professor Stephen Kuusisto Co-Authors Book of Pandemic Poetry

Original Source: SU News & Diana Weiner

Setting the scene … It’s spring of 2020. The world has been shut down for a period of weeks or months (you stopped keeping track at some point). You are living with a disability—perhaps you’re blind or you have a highly complex autoimmune condition that makes it especially precarious to make your way through daily life during a global pandemic. You are feeling isolated, alienated, disconnected and at times downright terrified. What do you do? Continue Reading

Thanks to Sen. Bob Dole, disabled Americans truly can pursue happiness (Guest Opinion by Stephen Kuusisto)

Bob Dole at a speaker podium
Sen. Bob Dole, R-Kan., makes a speech to supporters as he announced his bid for the Republican nomination for president in Topeka, Kan., April 10, 1995. Dole, who overcame disabling war wounds to become a sharp-tongued Senate leader from Kansas, died at 98. He championed the Americans with Disabilities Act, the last civil rights legislation to pass Congress. (Doug Mills | AP)AP

When the news reached me that Sen. Robert Dole has passed at 98, I was immediately reminded of my one and only meeting with him. I’m a disability rights activist and I’d been invited to the Finnish Embassy in Washington, D.C., to see him receive a lifetime achievement award honoring his work on the Americans with Disabilities Act. He was joined by his co-recipient, Sen. Tom Harkin. his longtime Senate colleague and personal friend. Each man spoke about the bipartisanship and determined optimism that made the ultimate passage of the ADA possible. It was hard work. It was very hard work. Listening to Dole and Harkin, I felt tears stream down my face. My guide dog wondered what was up. Continue Reading

Diane R. Wiener will read from her new poetry chapbook, Flashes & Specks, at the Tioga Arts Council (TAC),

Full-color book cover featuring original artwork—“The Origins”—by Lucy Wales. Book title in rectangular banner, top; deep blue background with white sans serif, capitalized lettering. The words “Poems by Diane R. Wiener” (at the very top) look as if made with an old school label maker, with the effect of appearing to be embossed. The words “Flashes & Specks” (after a white horizontal line) have blue spots in the lettering, as if mottled—possibly like a Crip appaloosa horse. The main scene on the cover is a fantastical world depicting steampunk grasshoppers, slugs, and snails. The slugs are suspended from shells (like hot air balloons) as they travel from a watery planet-orb through the sky to the land below. When they land, the shells connect to their bodies, and they become snails. The grasshoppers, aloft, have top hats and gears; the slugs-to-snails have steam engines on their shells (with accompanying, emergent smoke) and wear monocles. The artwork is multi-media—ink with watercolor. The color palette is a reflective mixture of the environments depicted—blues, greens, grays, and tans, with some creams, ivories, whites, and, indeed, magic

On Saturday, June 26, 2021, at 1:30 p.m. (Eastern), Diane R. Wiener will read from her new poetry chapbook, Flashes & Specks, at the Tioga Arts Council (TAC), in the gallery located at 179 Front Street, in Owego.

The reading can also be accessed on Zoom: https://syracuseuniversity.zoom.us/j/98763044729
Zoom Meeting ID: 987 6304 4729
Automatic captions will be provided on Zoom, with Otter.ai. Continue Reading

A Crip Reckoning: Reflections on the ADA@30 View Archive

In honor of the 30th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), the Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Outreach (OIPO)at the Burton Blatt Institute hosted an accessible Zoom webinar, open to the public, featuring a distinguished panel of thought leaders and scholar-activists in the worlds of disability culture, education, advocacy, and innovation.

The February 2, 2021 Zoom webinar—moderated by OIPO Director, Prof. Stephen Kuusisto—addressed many topics, including: ableism, cultural change, equity, creativity, and intersectionality. The event was made possible with generous support from University Lectures and the Office of Diversity and Inclusion.

Thirty for Thirtieth ADA Anniversary

As we near the thirtieth anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act, Stephen Kuusisto, Director of the Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Outreach located in the Burton Blatt Institute, is posting thirty short essays about the law, the anniversary, and the cultural impact of #ADA@30. According to Stephen, “I’m doing this as a disabled person who’s lived half his life before the ADA. I’m reflecting on the ‘before and after’ of the law.” Continue Reading

Stephen Kuusisto

Stephen Kuusisto directs BBI’s Interdisciplinary Programs and Outreach initiative. A University Professor at Syracuse, he is the author of the memoirs Planet of the Blind (a New York Times “Notable Book of the Year”) and Eavesdropping: A Memoir of Blindness and Listening as well as the poetry collections Only Bread, Only Light, and Letters to Borges. His newest memoir, Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet’s Journey, is new from Simon & Schuster. A graduate of the Iowa Writer’s Workshop and a Fulbright Scholar, he has taught at the University of Iowa, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, and The Ohio State University. Professor Kuusisto has served as an advisor to the Metropolitan Museum and the Museum of Modern Art in New York and the National Endowment for the Arts in Washington DC and has appeared on numerous television and radio programs including The Oprah Winfrey Show; Dateline; All Things Considered; Morning Edition; Talk of the Nation; A & E; and Animal Planet. His essays have appeared in The New York Times; The Washington Post; Harper’s; The Reader’s Digest; and his daily blog “Planet of the Blind” is read globally by people interested in disability and contemporary culture.

He is a frequent speaker in the US and abroad. His website is: www.stephenkuusisto.com

Books (other than edited volumes) and monographs

  • Have Dog, Will Travel: A Poet’s Journey, Simon & Schuster, New York, NY. March, 2018
  • Letters to Borges: A Collection of Poems, Copper Canyon Press, Port Townsend, WA,  2013
  • Do Not Interrupt:  A Playful Take on the Art of Conversation.  Sterling Publishing, New York, NY.  June 2010.
  • Eavesdropping: A Memoir of Blindness and Listening.  New York: W.W. Norton and Co. 2006.
  • The Emptiness Between Stars: Gedichte/Poems. Selected poems from Only Bread, Only Light, translated from English into German by Lilian Faschinger. Vienna, Austria: Kurbis, 2003. (The Emptiness Between Stars: Gedichte/Poems is in German and English and also in German Braille and English Braille.)
  • Only Bread, Only Light: Poems. Port Townsend, WA: Copper Canyon Press, 2000.
  • Planet of the Blind. New York: The Dial Press, 1998.
  • Foreign Editions/Translations of Eavesdropping: A Memoir of Blindness and Listening Kuulukuviat.  Trans. Helsinki: Arkki Books, 2007.

Edited books

  • Kuusisto, Stephen, Deborah Tall, and David Weiss, eds. The Poet’s Notebook: Excerpts from the Notebooks of Contemporary American Poets. 1st pb. edition. New York: W. W. Norton, 1997. Approximate percentage of contribution 33%. I assisted with the conception of the book and corresponded with approximately half of the contributors.
  • Kuusisto, Stephen, ed. Taking Note: From Poets’ Notebooks. Geneva, NY: Hobart and William Smith Colleges Press, 1991.

Chapters in edited books

  • “Selections from Planet of the Blind” The Disability Studies Reader, 4th Edition, Ed. Lennard J. Davis. Routledge, 2014
  • Plato, Again.”  Telling Stories out of Court: Narratives about Women and Work Place Discrimination, Ed. Ruth O’Brien.  Cornell University Press, 2008.
  •  “Teaching By Ear.”  Disability and the Teaching of Writing, Eds. Cynthia Lewiecki-Wilson and Brenda Jo Bruggemann.  Bedford/St. Martin’s Press, 2007.  124-129.
  • “In the Dark.” Writing and Grammar: Communication in Action, Eds. Joyce Armstrong Carroll, Edward E. Wilson, and Gary Forlini. New Jersey: Pearson Education, Inc., 2004. 168-169.
  • “Life Without Mozart.” Voices from the Edge: Narratives about the Americans with Disabilities Act, Ed Ruth O’Brien.  Oxford, UK: Oxford UP, 2003. 81-95.
  • Blind Date” Dog is My Co-Pilot: A Collection of Writings on Dogs. Ed Claudia Kawczynska. New York: Crown Publishing, 2003. 40-48.
  • “Nanao Sakaki’s ‘Real Play’.” Nanao or Never: Nanao Sakaki Walks Earth. Ed. Gary Lawless. Nobleboro, ME: Blackberry Books, 2000. 68-78.
  • “Tender Helpers.” (Selections from Planet of the Blind.Their Healing Power. Ed. Phyllis Hobe. Vol. 2 Listening to the Animals Series. Carmel, NY: Guideposts, 1999. 35-42.
  • “Robert Bly’s Iron John and the New ‘Lawrentian’ Man.” Critical Essays on Robert Bly. Ed. William Virgil Davis. Critical Essays on American Literature. New York: G.K. Hall, 1992. 96-103.

Interfaith Dialogue Dinner Series Addresses ‘Faith and Mental Health’ on March 3

Reprinted from Syracuse University News – Campus & Community

The University’s ongoing Interfaith Dialogue Dinner Series, “Common and Diverse Ground: Raising Consciousnesses by Acknowledging the ‘Hidden’ Things that Divide Us,” continues on Tuesday, March 3, with the second dialogue of the Spring 2020 semester. The dialogue will include an in-depth discussion on “Faith and Mental Health” with guest co-facilitator Shanti Das ’93 and student co-facilitator Shaelise Tor, a doctoral candidate. Continue Reading

Rachael A. Zubal-Ruggieri

Rachael A. Zubal-Ruggieri is the Administrative Assistant of the Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Outreach at the Burton Blatt Institute. She is a recent non-traditional, cum laude graduate in the Human Development & Family Science program at Falk College, with a Disability Studies Minor, at Syracuse University (SU). Her current research interests include Self-Advocacy, Representations of Disability in Popular Culture, and Interdisciplinary Disability Studies.

Rachael has dedicated her career to improving the lives of people with disabilities, including broad-based support to multiple disability rights initiatives on campus, in the CNY area, and nationally, through many grant-funded projects and opportunities as well as via long-term relationships with community agencies and programs while working for over 30 years at SU’s Center on Human Policy. She is a founding member of the university’s undergraduate disability rights organization, the Disability Student Union (DSU). Rachael serves on the Disability Events Planning Committee, a subcommittee of the Disability Access and Inclusion Council at SU, and is Assistant Editor of Wordgathering: A Journal of Disability Poetry and Literature. Rachael’s current activities include serving as Co-Advisor of the Self-Advocacy Network (formerly Self-Advocates of CNY), Project Manager for the Disability Poetics video series, and has previously served as a Board Member of Disabled in Action of Greater Syracuse, Inc.

Rachael is also co-creator (with Diane R. Wiener) of “Cripping” the Comic Con, the first of its kind interdisciplinary and international symposium on disability and popular culture, previously held at SU. Rachael is also co-coordinator of the Geek/Art CONfluence, a comic con focused on creativity, inclusion, and diversity in geek culture which is hosted at SU. At conferences and as a guest lecturer, she has for many years presented on the X-Men comic books, Deadpool. popular culture, and disability rights and identities. As a Neurodivergent parent to an Autistic son, Rachael also writes and presents about neurodiversity and autism parenting, seeking to debunk and disrupt traditional representations of “the autism mom.” Their most recent work includes poetry published in Wordgathering and two articles published in the Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, co-authored with Diane R. Wiener.

Winter Issue of Wordgathering, a Digital Open Access Journal of Work From Disabled Writers and Artists, Now Live

Reprinted from: Syracuse University News Arts & Culture 

Wordgathering: A Journal of Disability Poetry and LiteratureThe winter issue of Wordgathering: A Journal of Disability Poetry and Literature is now live on Wordgathering’s new website. This is the quarterly journal’s 52nd issue and the first under publication by the Office of Interdisciplinary Programs and Outreach in Syracuse University’s Burton Blatt Institute (BBI), headquartered in the College of Law, and Syracuse University Libraries. Under the new editor-in-chief, Diane R. Wiener, research professor and associate director of interdisciplinary programs and outreachthe journal is now available via digital open access.

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