Warrior Women: Alice Wong
There is a tendency in our society to overlook the disabled population. Although the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) was enacted over thirty years ago, there is still a lot of work to be done regarding accessibility and resources for people with disabilities. Alice Wong is in the vanguard of that fight. Born in 1974 with a neuromuscular disorder known as spinal muscular atrophy, a condition that causes the breakdown of nerves in her body, Wong was left unable to walk by the age of seven or eight. A disabled Asian American living in Indianapolis, Indiana, Wong has described the inevitability that she would become an activist. In an interview with NPR she says, "I truly believe I had no choice [but] to advocate for myself ever since I was child because it was a matter of survival in this unforgiving and inaccessible world."
The culmination of Wong's work lies in the Disability Visibility Project (DPV). It is an online space built specifically to amplify the voices of people with disabilities. Here they celebrate the history and culture of the disabled community, and publish a variety of original forms of media "from the perspective of disabled people." Wong has described the empowerment her project has provided for people with disabilities in an interview with Color Web Magazine, "The tools and resources are there for disabled people to use. They can shape their narrative in any way they want and by creating new media that's more authentic, it will amplify and uplift those voices."
"I am a disabled woman of color and I will always look at disability from that lens."
"I try really hard not to be a unicorn."
Lu, T. (2023) Activist Alice Wong reflects on 'the year of the Tiger' and her hopes for 2023, NPR. NPR. Available at: https://www.npr.org/2023/02/04/1153937530/activist-alice-wong-lunar-new-year-year-of-the-tiger-rabbit (Accessed: February 9, 2023).
Monique (2016) Exclusive interview: Alice Wong (disability visibility project), JUST ADD COLOR-Affirming Ourselves Through Entertainment. Available at: https://www.colorwebmag.com/2016/04/20/exclusive-interview-alice-wong-disability-visibility-project/ (Accessed: February 9, 2023).
Alice Wong, Superstition Review. Available at: https://superstitionreview.asu.edu/issue26/interviews/alicewong (Accessed: February 9, 2023).


I am unfamiliar with Alice Wong and her activism. I never took into account how the disabled population is overlooked in regards to accessibility. Wong created and online space to make the voices of disabled individuals heard, the Disability visibility Project. This project I find inspiring because it is shaped to be easier to use and to be more authentic.
ReplyDeleteThis story is very moving and motivating due to the fact that Wong, herself became disabled at such a young age and still chose to advocate for disabled rights. I like the idea that she advocates for disabled writers--to give them the motivation and stride to still have a voice, regardless of their disability. Further, this story is very inspirational to women of her time because Wong presents to her audience that regardless of her ethnicity or disability she has dedicated her life to fighting for what she believes in.
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