Abstract
This paper explores the divergent theoretical developments in the UK and US disability studies and posits some explanations for these differing trajectories. History, politics, space, place and the search for identity have all played important roles. These emergent and hotly debated developments add a wealth of material to the epistemological project. The recent collections by Barnes et al. (2002) Disability studies today, and Snyder et al. ( 2002 Snyder SL (2002) Infinities of forms: disability figures in artistic traditions in: S. L. Snyder, B. J. Brueggemann & R. Garland‐Thomson (Eds) Disability studies: enabling the humanities (New York, The Modern Language Association of America) [Google Scholar] ) Disability studies: enabling the humanities, will be used as pivotal works. However, the question remains as to what explanatory power discourses developed within western metropolitan national cultures have for exploring the experience of disability in cultures on the peripheries. This analysis is being undertaken by an English born academic, who has been living in Australia for over 20 years and has been keenly watching and participating in the transatlantic battles over the past decade.

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