“…Until a marked increase of interest and publications beginning in the late 1980s and carrying into the 1990s, sociologists, disability, and sexuality studies scholars often tended to leave the study of sexuality and disability to medical professionals and as a result neglected issues surrounding sexuality and disability (Shakespeare, 2014;Shakespeare et al, 1996;Waxman-Fiduccia, 2000). Beginning with a number of feminist texts that challenged the earlier neglect of these topics, sociologists, disability, and sexuality studies scholars began to explore various dimensions of disability and sexuality, often through compelling personal memoirs (see Abu-Habib, 1995;Appleby, 1993;Clare, 1999;Ferri & Gregg, 1998;Fine & Asch, 1988;Finger, 1990Finger, , 1992Gerschick & Miller, 1994, 1995Grealy, 1994;Hahn, 1981;Mairs, 1996;Morris, 1989Morris, , 1991Morris, , 1993O 0 Brien, 1990;Shakespeare et al, 1996;Thomas, 1999;Waxman & Finger, 1989, 1991Waxman & Gill, 1996). Unlike previous medical research on disability and sexuality, these texts focused on the lived experience of disability by prioritizing the voices and experiences of disabled people and thereby began what Sherry (2004) has dubbed the "deconstruction of the public/private divide" (p. 776) in disability-sexuality research.…”