Mary Frances Platt

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BornJune 16, 1953
Methuen, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedSeptember 15, 2004 (aged 51)
OthernamesMaryFrances Platt
OccupationsWriter, activist
Mary Frances Platt
BornJune 16, 1953
Methuen, Massachusetts, U.S.
DiedSeptember 15, 2004 (aged 51)
Other namesMaryFrances Platt
OccupationsWriter, activist

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.

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]

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

References

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