
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode we chat with Alice Wong, disability activist, media producer, and a consultant. She is the founder and Project Coordinator of the Disability Visibility Project, a project collecting oral histories of people with disabilities in the United States that is being run in coordination with StoryCorps. The Disability Visibility Project was created on the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. As of 2018, the project had collected approximately 140 oral histories.
Her new project is an anthology titled, Disability Visibility First Person Stories from the 21st Century. Joining Alice in part 2 of this episode is Dr. Diana Cejas, a physician with a disability and one of the authors in Disability Visibility. Dr. Cejas shares her journey to becoming a person with a disability and how her dual identities as a patient and a physician inform her work with patients. Her essay is titled, Taking charge of my story as a cancer patient at the hospital where I work.
Key Words: BIPOC, Physical Disability, Spinal Muscular Atrophy, Activist
By Dr. Lisa Meeks and Dr. Peter Poullos4.9
4848 ratings
In this episode we chat with Alice Wong, disability activist, media producer, and a consultant. She is the founder and Project Coordinator of the Disability Visibility Project, a project collecting oral histories of people with disabilities in the United States that is being run in coordination with StoryCorps. The Disability Visibility Project was created on the 25th anniversary of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. As of 2018, the project had collected approximately 140 oral histories.
Her new project is an anthology titled, Disability Visibility First Person Stories from the 21st Century. Joining Alice in part 2 of this episode is Dr. Diana Cejas, a physician with a disability and one of the authors in Disability Visibility. Dr. Cejas shares her journey to becoming a person with a disability and how her dual identities as a patient and a physician inform her work with patients. Her essay is titled, Taking charge of my story as a cancer patient at the hospital where I work.
Key Words: BIPOC, Physical Disability, Spinal Muscular Atrophy, Activist

90,967 Listeners

32,003 Listeners

38,498 Listeners

43,582 Listeners

27,359 Listeners

1,332 Listeners

142 Listeners

10,152 Listeners

14,621 Listeners

300 Listeners

56,513 Listeners

1,351 Listeners

278 Listeners

8,727 Listeners

11,409 Listeners