Chronicling England’s infamous rejection of an established faith tradition – the Protestant Reformation – and its reverberating effects on societal interpretations of sensory disability, Mary Lutze offers a new epistemology for understanding early modern perspectives of the disabled. In addition to illuminating the historical treatment of disabled bodies in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England, Lutze’s study clarifies an origin for the inherited stigma towards nonnormative bodies today. In its introduction of the early modern religious model of disabilities and the application of that model on a catalogue of early modern cultural artifacts, Reforming Sensory Disability in Early Modern England provides a new dialectic by which disability studies and early modern scholars may approach and understand the dramatic and nondramatic texts of the period.
Mary Lutze is an English Faculty member and the Writing Center Director at the University of North Texas. She is currently co-authoring a new monograph titled Advancing Accessibility with Deaf Theatre (forthcoming August 2027).
AcknowledgementsIntroduction: Early Modern Disability Studies’ Relevance in Contemporary Culture 1. The Early Modern Religious Model of Disabilities2. The Spectacle of False Impairment in Early Modern Drama3. Representations of Authentic Impairment On and Off the Early Modern Stage4. Sensory Impairment as Spiritual Gain in Early Modern Poetry and Prose5. Recovering Humanity: Instructing the Sensorily ImpairedConclusion: Reverberations of Religious Reform in Present DayWorks CitedIndex