bunnymay
bunnymay
pennsylvania
Female
Single

disability fetishism

Posted: 6/14/2008 at 01:36 AM

  • share this:
  • Email to a Friend
  • Digg It!
  • StumbleUpon
  • Fark
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • NewsVine

member(s) liked this post.

 the Onion AV Club reviewed Quid Pro Quo this week, the film about apotemnophilism aka disability fetishism. Specifically, people who desire to become disabled, often through surgical intervention.

Typically we hear about these "wannabes" through news stories about elective amputation of a limb, but in the case of this movie, it can also involve paralysis/spinal cord injury.

I feel conflicted about this movie, because I am of the opinion that any depiction of wheelchair users as sexual is a good thing. Really, any depiction at all will do, because we are largely an invisible minority to a lot of people, and the only way to change that is to raise awareness. So for me a feature film that explores sexuality within a disability context is a move in the right direction, no matter how awful the subtext of the film might be.

I seriously doubt that the film will drive home what wannabes are really seeking, which I believe to be permanent victim hood. There are a lot of people out there even without this "affliction" who desire the stereotype attention of persons with a disability - the public attention, the pity and the reverence for "making it despite the odds". I would imagine that it's an attempt to present their internal pain in a permanently external way, much like a cutter does, though in this case their is a desire for that pain to be known to the world in an unmistakable way. For certain, these wannabes are perhaps the worst offenders when it comes to seeing the disabled as people since their idealized image of life with a disability is wholly grounded in stereotypes.

Whatever the root of this and the solution for society, I don't much care. I just want more wheelchair users in the public eye.

294 Views
  • share this:
  • Email to a Friend
  • Digg It!
  • StumbleUpon
  • Fark
  • Facebook
  • del.icio.us
  • Reddit
  • NewsVine

Your comment may take up to 15 minutes to appear.

Some HTML is allowed in the comments. See the list.
  • JeanR wrote on Jun 14, 2008 at 10:14 AM

    I am so naive. I never would have guessed that someone would aspire to be disabled. The reasons you present for this do make sense, though. I guess some people will do anything for attention.


  • Nanal wrote on Jun 14, 2008 at 11:42 AM

    I've never even heard of this fetish before but I don't think it's the way we need to portray wheelchair users........at all !......Peace and love......Norma


  • stikiewicket wrote on Jun 14, 2008 at 11:51 AM

    I have not seen the movie, but based on what I read, it's not the wheelchair user who is portrayed as a wannabe.  He uses a chair from a childhood accident, and is involved in a journalistic investigation of a person who wants to have a leg removed.


    I'm rather surprised that this topic was used as the basis for a movie.  I've seen no mention of it outside of the disability community until now.


    My impression is that most of the interest in this area involves people in wheelchairs, or perhaps with other mobility issues.  Since I have a visual impairment, I don't think I've really been affected.  On the other hand, there could be people following me around and taking pictures, and I'd never know <grin>


  • Ophouroboros wrote on Jun 22, 2008 at 5:59 AM

    That's a really good observation about wannabe's and externalization.  I tend to think that most wannabes would benefit from treatment of their depression or whatever is making them self destructive.  They're quite delusional if they think being in a wheelchair earns you all this love and  help when you need it.  They really don't comprehend the scope of what it means to be physically dis-abled, all the different facets that change and get frustrating or impossible, all the grieving and not to mention pain or finances.