Understanding Deaf Culture: In Search of Deafhood

Front Cover
Multilingual Matters, 2003 - Education - 502 pages

This book presents a 'Traveller's Guide' to Deaf Culture, starting from the premise that Deaf cultures have an important contribution to make to other academic disciplines, and human lives in general. Within and outside Deaf communities, there is a need for an account of the new concept of Deaf culture, which enables readers to assess its place alongside work on other minority cultures and multilingual discourses. The book aims to assess the concepts of culture, on their own terms and in their many guises and to apply these to Deaf communities. The author illustrates the pitfalls which have been created for those communities by the medical concept of 'deafness' and contrasts this with his new concept of "Deafhood", a process by which every Deaf child, family and adult implicitly explains their existence in the world to themselves and each other.

Contents

Introduction
1
The Relevance of Deaf Culture for Diverse Audiences
12
Demystifying the Author An Invitation to Participate
20
Deaf Communities
26
xvii
75
Twentieth Century Discourses
135
12
193
Culture Definitions and Theories
196
Residential Schools
297
Deaf Clubs and Deaf Subalterns
332
Subaltern Rebels and Deafhood National Dimensions
369
Deafhood and Deaf Political Culture Subaltern
391
The Contemporary BDA and Deafhood Issues
397
Afterword
434
Language In Your Bloodstream
462
The Blue Ribbon Ceremony
471

21
204
32
210
Discourses and Definitions
232
39
242
Researching Deaf Communities Subaltern Researcher
267
Bibliography
477
Index
496
52
500
Copyright

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About the author (2003)

Paddy Ladd is a Lecturer and MSc co-ordinator at the Centre for Deaf Studies in the University of Bristol. He completed his PhD in Deaf Culture at Bristol University in 1998 and has written, edited and contributed to numerous publications in the field. Both his writings and his Deaf activism have received international recognition, and in 1998 he was awarded the Deaf Lifetime Achievement Award by the Federation of Deaf People, for activities which have extended the possibilities for Deaf communities both in the UK and worldwide.

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