Irving Kenneth Zola (1935 – December 1, 1994) was an American activist and writer in medical sociology and disability rights.
During the thirty years that he spent in the department, Zola held the position of chairman three different times over a span of eleven years. For fifteen years, he held a joint appointment in the Florence Heller Graduate School for Advanced Studies in Social Welfare at Brandeis.
Zola was one of the co-founders of Boston Self Help Center, an organization that is focused on advocating and counseling people with diseases and disabilities. From 1982 to 1987, he also served on the center's board as executive director.
He also held the chairman position of the medical sociology section of the American Sociological Association, a consultant position of the World Health Organization, a membership of President Clinton's transition team, and a fellowship of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.
In 1982 Zola and a group of American academics founded the Society for Disability Studies. He was the first editor of Disability Studies Quarterly.
The 'Dr. Irving Kenneth Zola Collection,' a repository of most of Zola's works, can be found at The Samuel Gridley Howe Library at Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts. Zola had taught at Brandeis since 1963.
His writings included an autobiography, "Missing Pieces: A Chronicle of Living with a Disability," published in 1982. He edited "Ordinary Lives: Voices of Disability and Disease," a 1982 anthology that was praised as a diverse collection of fictional and personal accounts. A longer list of his writings are available here: https://irvingzola.com/howe.htm.
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