METHODS article
Front. Sociol.
Sec. Medical Sociology
Volume 10 - 2025 | doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2025.1600693
This article is part of the Research TopicNovel Sociological Methods and Practices of Engagement across Disability CommunitiesView all 6 articles
Special Issue: Frontiers in Sociology Novel Sociological Methods and Practices of Engagement across Disability Communities Cripping Inquiry: Breathing life into co-produced disability methodologies
Provisionally accepted- 1The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
- 2Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Sheffield, United Kingdom
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Introduction Our contributions within this article emerge from our experiences of co-leading a new Wellcome Discovery Award funded project, Cripping Breath: Towards a New Cultural Politics of Respiration. As a diverse team of clinicians, artists, academics and others with lived and embodied experience of disability, chronic illness, and neurodivergence, we are broadly exploring breathing and ventilation (e.g. forms of medical technology that support respiration) through arts-informed, archival, narrative and ethnographic research approaches. Methods Cripping Breath aims to forge new understandings of respiration from crip perspectives (see McRuer 2006), which unapologetically centre disability as a valued human experience. In this article, we unpack the meanings, politics and practices of crip perspectives and methodologies - forms of knowledge production that emerge from lived and embodied experiences of disability and chronic illness - and consider their contributions to our project so far. We think through crip time (Kafer 2013), Slow scholarship (Mountz et al. 2015) and (seemingly) radical things like rest and recuperation (Atkinson et al. 2024), and grief and loss (Borgstrom and Ellis 2021) within the research process. Results We share the importance of embracing flexibility, adaptability and radical care as routine across our team, because we all bring various types of impairment, embodiment, chronic illness (see Piepzna-Samarasinha 2018), and caring responsibilities. Discussion We question the meanings of these forms of welcoming in disability, impairment and difference as ways to develop radical and cripcultures of co-produced and innovative disability research methodologies, and conclude by calling for a more inclusive sociology.
Keywords: Co-production, crip, Ventilation, illness, care, embodiment
Received: 26 Mar 2025; Accepted: 26 May 2025.
Copyright: © 2025 Ellis, Atkinson, Glover, Kettle, Joseph, Hale, Jones, Coles, Bligh, Bridgens, O'Kane, Negus, Ali, Thompson, Waters, Coats, Gibson, Weiner, Lawson and Liddiard. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
* Correspondence: Kirsty Liddiard, The University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
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