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Mary Frances Platt
American writer and activist (1953–2004) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Mary Frances Platt (June 16, 1953 – September 15, 2004), sometimes written as MaryFrances Platt or mary frances platt, was an American writer and activist in the causes of disability rights, LGBT rights, feminism, and fat liberation.
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Early life and education
Platt was born in Methuen, Massachusetts, the daughter of James D. Platt and Mary F. Donovan Platt. Her father was a veteran of World War II.[1] She described her childhood as difficult because she was asthmatic, and she was institutionalized as a teenager. She held a master of education degree (MEd), in counseling psychology.[2][3]
Career
Platt worked in carnivals as a young woman.[2][4] She was a writer and activist in the causes of disability rights, gay rights, feminism, and fat liberation. Her essays and poems appeared in activist periodicals including Off Our Backs[5] and Ragged Edge,[6] and in several anthologies.[7][8][9] "I am not a disabled woman who is imprisoned in her body or who has overcome or who strives to overcome her disability," she began a 1995 essay. "I am a radical crip who struggles to stay alive in an ableist culture."[7]
After finding support for her concerns at the East Coast Lesbian Festival in 1989,[10] she served on the steering committee of the National Lesbian Conference (NLC) in 1990.[11] She also ran a support group for "adult daughters of addicted and emotionally ill parents" in Northampton, Massachusetts.[12]
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Publications
- "Disability and Accessibility Cost Money!" (1990, with Margy Dowzer and Aviva Schmuckler)[2]
- "Creating Accessibility: Organizing for the National Lesbian Conference" (1990)[13]
- "Serious Shit at the NLC" (1990)[5]
- "A View from this Wheelchair" (1990)[10][14]
- "25 Ways to Oppress a Lesbian with a Disability" (1991)[15]
- "Planning an Accessible Indoor Event" (1992, with Lynn Zelvin and Shemaya Laurel)[16]
- "Reclaiming Femme--Again" (1992)[8]
- "Jennifer's Gift" (1995)[17]
- "Not Imprisoned, Just a Fact of Life" (1995)[7]
- "United in Ableism's Web" (1996)[18]
- "Oxygenated Babe" (1995, 1999)[19][20]
- "Mae Still Be Alive" (1999)[21]
- "Assisted Suicide: Devaluing Disabled Life" (1999)[3]
- "Passing through Shame" and "Personal Assistance: A job, a politic" (1999)[9]
- "Homesick Song" (2000)[22]
- "The New Refugees" (2003)[6]
- "The Belchertown Crip Railroad" (2003)[23]
- "The Terri Schindler Schiavo Crippled Kickball Team" (2003)[24]
- "Rebeca, Me and the Freak Show" (2004)[25]
Personal life
Platt lived in Belchertown, Massachusetts, but sometimes traveled in her van during the winter, to manage her respiratory and neurological conditions.[6] After a pulmonary embolism in adulthood,[3] she used a motorized wheelchair and supplemental oxygen,[7] and had a service dog named Lucy.[26][27] She died in 2004, at the age of 51.
References
External links
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