
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Alice Wong, a disability rights activist and author whose independence and writing inspired others, has died. She was 51.
Wong died Friday because of an infection at a hospital in San Francisco, said Sandy Ho, a close friend who has been in touch with Wong's family.
Ho called her friend a “luminary of the disability justice movement" who wanted to see a world where people with disabilities, especially ones of marginalized demographics who were people of color, LGBTQ and immigrants, could live freely and have full autonomy over their lives and decisions.
The daughter of Hong Kong immigrants, Wong was born with muscular dystrophy. She used a powered wheelchair and an assistive breathing device.
On social media Ho shared a statement Wong wrote before her death in which she said never imagined her trajectory would turn out as it did, to writing, activism and more.
“It was thanks to friendships and some great teachers who believed in me that I was able to fight my way out of miserable situations into a place where I finally felt comfortable in my skin. We need more stories about us and our culture,” Wong wrote.
She advocated “getting people out of institutions and remaining in the community,” Ho said. Wong's works — including books she authored and edited and the Disability Visibility Project blog she started — shared her writing and voices and the perspectives of others, Ho said.
Wong was a funny person and a hilarious writer, not an easy skill, Ho said. Her memoir "Year of the Tiger: An Activist's Life" is filled with humorous snippets but also humanizes disability, Ho said.
The legacy of Wong's work is that people with disabilities “speak for themselves and that nobody speaks for us,” Ho said.
Wong was among the 2024 class of fellows of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, recipients of the “genius grant.”
latest_posts
- 1
Science is best communicated through identity and culture – how researchers are ensuring STEM serves their communities - 2
More loons are filling Maine's lakes with their ghostlike calls - 3
Antivirus Programming for Exhaustive Security - 4
Eat Well, Live Well: An Extensive Manual for Smart dieting and Sustenance - 5
Investigate These Retreats Well known With Seniors
Instructions to Pick the Right Dental Embed Trained professional: An Exhaustive Aide
Kissing is an ‘evolutionary conundrum.’ Scientists just mapped its unexpected origins
FDA updates risk classification for voluntary shredded cheese recall
The newest 'Project Hail Mary' trailer shows Ryan Gosling befriending an alien in Phil Lord and Chris Miller's space epic
Black Friday Paramount+ deal: Save 50% and stream these buzzy Taylor Sheridan shows
Most loved Fish Dish: What's Your Sea Pleasure?
A company is trying to unlock a key to aging, in a long-overlooked body part
NASA, in a rare move, cuts space station mission short after an astronaut's medical issue
New dinosaur tracks in Italy illustrate herds moving in unison













