Telethons
Spectacle, Disability, and the Business of Charity
Paul K. Longmore
Reviews and Awards
"Recommended."--CHOICE
"Longmore's book wears its intelligence in its incisive commentary and concepts. Students and scholars could learn a lot from this book, including how to write about complex ideas in clear, readable prose. The book manages to do all this in thirteen tightly written chapters, plus introduction and conclusion...While concise, the book takes no shortcuts, being heavily or even exhaustively evidenced...Longmore's book is powerful and persuasive. It's also a great pleasure to read, in the way that watching a master thinker is pleasurable. He thinks with material in impressive ways that seem effortless Scholars with other interests would no doubt see much else in Longmore's book related to their interests, as there is a great deal in this fine book. We should all be grateful that Longmore wrote Telethons and that his colleagues did the work to make sure we could read it."--Disability Studies Quarterly
"Longmore explores a classic form of American kitch in a radically new way. Telethons shows us how the crass extravaganzas of pity and benevolence collided with new ideas about justice and dignity. The result is a fascinating tour of television, voluntarism, civil rights, and America itself."--James A. Morone, author of Hellfire Nation and The Devils We Know
"Just as Americans gathered around their televisions to watch the spectacle of telethons, so should all gather around Telethons. This long-awaited book smartly unravels the powerful but previously unexamined ties between public policy, business, popular culture, and ableist assumptions about disability. A pleasure to read, vibrating with Longmore's wit and intelligence, this book is marvelous."--Kim E. Nielsen, author of A Disability History of the United States
"Telethons brilliantly explores a multifaceted and uniquely American innovation, the 'television marathon,' a spectacle that simultaneously raised vast funds for good causes, contributed in surprising ways to the advent of the disability rights movement, and disseminated to a television-viewing nation an image of disabled people as pitiable, helpless, and perpetually childlike."--Douglas C. Baynton, author of Forbidden Signs: American Culture and the Campaign against Sign Language
"Telethons is Paul Longmore's posthumous tour de force. His history of the telethon gives readers a wide and expansive lens that reveals how this particularly American spectacle advances a skewed national mythology and ideology. This book is a must-read not just for students of culture and society about disability, disease, and medicine, but for anyone interested in twentieth- and twenty-first-century cultural and social American history."--Ruth O'Brien, author of Crippled Justice: The History of Modern Disability Policy in the Workplace