Rosemarie Garland-Thomson

Rosemarie Garland-Thomson is Professor of English at Emory University with a focus on disability studies and feminist theory.

[2] Garland-Thomson co-directed a National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Institute on disability studies in 2000, which shaped the development of many scholars who now lead the field, and was a founding member and co-chair for two years of the Modern Language Association (MLA) Committee on Disability Issues in the Profession, which transformed the largest academic professional organization into a model of accessibility for organizations across the world.

Garland-Thomson travels and speaks widely on the subject of disability studies in the US and abroad and has delivered major invited lectures and keynote addresses in: South Africa, Zimbabwe, Norway, Israel, Singapore, Sweden, Budapest, Canada, Germany, Iceland, Australia, the Netherlands, France, and England.

Her extensive public intellectual work has advanced disability studies outside the university, including the following: images and ideas from her book Staring: How We Look (2009)[3] were translated into an art exhibit at Davidson College in 2009[4] and was profiled in The Chronicle of Higher Education[5]; she was selected as one of Utne Reader’s 2010 “50 Visionaries Who Are Changing Your World".

[6][7] She has consulted and collaborated extensively about inclusion programs and initiatives with the Smithsonian Institution, the National Endowments for the Humanities and Arts, and the National Park Service on the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial; and her public scholarship pieces have appeared in well-known publications like The New York Times,[8] The Huffington Post,[9][10][11][12] and Al Jazeera.