Taboo and crip theory. New article on FiloTabù.
My new contribution has just been published on FiloTabù:
Tabù e teoria crip (Taboo and crip theory).
In this piece, I explore how cities are still designed around a single, idealised body — fast, young, able, autonomous. Everything that falls outside this norm becomes invisible, excluded, or treated as an inconvenience. Drawing on crip theory, I discuss how disability is not an individual flaw but the effect of environments that refuse to adapt.
The article reflects on the politics of accessibility and the hidden violence of everyday obstacles — a broken elevator, an unreadable sign, a street without benches or shade. Breaking the crip taboo means rethinking the city as a space built for difference, where vulnerability becomes not a limit but a source of knowledge and design.
You can read the full article (in Italian) on the FiloTabù blog.
