“…Ginsburg and Rapp ( 37 , 38 ) have clarified and critically summarized the global/local dynamics concerning disability rights and politics, the construction of alternative kinship frameworks, feminist and gender perspectives on difference, biopolitics, and the structural violence faced by individuals with non-normative bodies and the significance of material-symbolic infrastructures, technologies, and digital realms. In a similar vein, Devlieger ( 39 ) has directed attention to citizenship and belonging in the context of disability, to the impact of technology, and to the use of autoethnography, embodiment, and reflexivity as modalities through which individuals with disability articulate and scrutinize their own encounters and engagements with norms in society. Building on one of the first analyses of disability in sociocultural anthropology ( 35 , 60 , 82 ), other scholars have delved deeper into the intricate connections between disability and various forms of technology (e.g., social, material/instrumental, technical, etc.)…”