Eli Clare (born 1963) is an American writer, activist, educator, and speaker. His work focuses on queer, transgender, and disability issues. Clare was one of the first scholars to popularize the bodymind concept.
His work is associated with the second wave of the disability rights movement and disability justice.
Clare has received a number of awards for his work, including the Creating Change Award from the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and LGBT Artist of the Year from Michigan Pride. In 2018, Clare received the Richard L. Schlegel Award for visionary LGBTQ leadership from American University. That year, his book Brilliant Imperfection won the Randy Shilts Award for Gay Nonfiction from Publishing Triangle. In 2019, he was awarded a Disability Futures Fellowship by the Ford Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Clare was a visiting scholar at the University at Buffalo's Center for Diversity Innovation for the 2020–2021 academic year. He is also on the advisory board for the Disability Project, housed under the Transgender Law Center, the largest national trans-led organization.
Other prominent scholars to theorize on bodymind include Price, Sami Schalk, Gloria Anzaldua, and Alyson Patsavas.
Clare's scholarly work has been published in Public Culture, , Seattle Journal for Social Justice, Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies, Tikkun, and Disability Studies Quarterly.
Clare has also submitted chapters to the following anthologies: Gender and Women's Studies in Canada: Critical Terrain, the fourth edition of The Disability Studies Reader, Disability Studies and the Environmental Humanities: Toward an Eco-Crip Theory, Material Ecocriticism, The Blackwell Guide to Feminist Philosophy, Staring Back: The Disability Experience from the Inside Out, Queerly Classed, Unruly Bodies: Life Writing by Women with Disabilities, and .
Queerly Classed is a collection of essays discussing the intersections of class background, social status, and "queerness", to which Clare contributed the essay "Losing Home". The anthology won the Lambda Literary Award for Lesbian Studies and was a finalist for the Stonewall Book Awards' Israel Fishman Nonfiction Award.
is a collection of personal stories from gay men with disabilities edited by Bob Guter and John R. Killacky. To this anthology, Eli Clare submitted "Gawking, Gaping, Staring". The book won the 2004 Lambda Literary Award for the Anthologies/Non-fiction category.
Clare's poems and essays have been published in , Sinister Wisdom, Cultural Activisms: Political Voices, Poetic Voices, Points of Contact: Disability, Art, and Culture, and The Arc of Love: An Anthology of Lesbian Love Poems.
Exile and Pride discusses Clare's experiences as a "white disabled genderqueer activist/writer" and explores the meaning of "home" through autobiographical narratives while covering the topics of oppression, power, resistance, environmental destruction, capitalism, sexuality, institutional violence, gender, and social justice more generally.
In this work, Eli Clare "explores how bodies carry history and identity over time". The poems include contradiction and repetition as they discuss the themes of disability, race, gender, violence, and sexuality.
In Brilliant Imperfection, Eli Clare explores the concept of cure, "the deeply held belief that Bodymind considered broken need to be fixed," while using memoir, history, and critical analysis to discuss the intersectionality of race, disability, sexuality, class, and gender, as well as environmental politics. Clare is one of the first scholars to popularize the concept of bodymind, which he uses in Brilliant Imperfection as a way to resist common Western assumptions that the body and mind are separate entities or that the mind is "superior" to the body.
As of 2018, he lived near Lake Champlain in Vermont.
|
|