“…They reproduce expectations of “natural” bodily comportment, cognition, style, and mobility at the expense of those who fall outside these lines. Thus the normative constraints that arise from our perception and categorization of bodies contributes to consolidating binary categories such as healthy or sick (Toombs , Carel , ; Freeman ), able or disabled (Erevelles ; Herndon ; Kattari, Olzman, and Hanna ), sane or mad (Kafai ; Wolframe ), and normal or abnormal (Wehrle , , ; Weiss ; Jansen and Wehrle ). These notions, along with many others (for example, race, gender, class, sexual expression), converge in our own and others’ representation and perception of our bodies (Ahmed ; Alcoff ; Al‐Saji ; Hall ), coiling personal and shared social horizons.…”