About

Michael Dale Stokes is a scholar whose work engages with the complex entanglements of disability narratives, science fiction/horror, critical race, and contemporary culture. He is a PhD student at Michigan State University and co-founder of the HIVES Research Workshop and Speaker Series. His work focuses on the relationships of disabled characters in science fiction/horror literature and film from the 1900s to the present with race, queerness, and sexuality. He is particularly interested in how these narratives are (dis)figured as they are remade, rebooted, and rehashed in contemporary literature, film, and television. Michael’s work has been delivered in the Centre for Cultural and Disability Studies’ Disability and Emotion lecture series and published in The Museum of Science Fiction’s Journal of Science Fiction and The Journal of Analogue Game Studies.

Blog Posts

Publications

“The Future is Scar-y: the Connective Tissue of Emotion, Body, & Identity” Journal of Science Fiction. Museum of Science Fiction. Vol. 3:2. 31 July 2019.


“Access to the Page: Queer and Disabled Characters in Dungeons and Dragons” Journal of Analogue Game Studies. Vol 4.3. 30 May 2017.

Michael Stokes

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@stomike

Active 4 years, 8 months ago