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Understanding Deaf Culture

Understanding Deaf Culture

Dr. Paddy Ladd

(2003)

Abstract

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.


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.


Table of Contents

Section Title Page Action Price
Contents vii
Acknowledgements xii
Glossary of Terms and Abbreviations xvii
Plate 1 Plate1
Plate 2 Plate2
Plate 3 Plate3
Plate 4 Plate4
Plate 5 Plate5
Plate 6 Plate6
Plate 7 Plate7
Plate 8 Plate8
Introduction 1
Chapter 1 Deaf Communities 26
Chapter 2 Deafness and Deafhood in Western Civilisation – Towards the Development of a New Conceptual Framework 75
Chapter 3 Twentieth Century Discourses 135
Chapter 4 Culture – Definitions and Theories 196
Chapter 5 Deaf Culture: Discourses and Definitions 232
Chapter 6 Researching Deaf Communities – Subaltern Researcher Methodologies 267
Chapter 7 The Roots of Deaf Culture: Residential Schools 297
Chapter 8 The Roots of Deaf Culture: Deaf Clubs and Deaf Subalterns 332
Chapter 9 Subaltern Rebels and Deafhood – National Dimensions 369
Chapter 10 Conclusions and Implications 401
Chapter 11 Afterword 434
Further Reading 463
Appendix 1 Charity Colony 467
Appendix 2 Text of the Blue Ribbon Ceremony, XIII World Congress of the World Federation of the Deaf, Brisbane, Australia 25–31 July 1999 469
Appendix 3 List of Initial Questions and Topic Areas Presented to Deaf Informants 472
Appendix 4 United Kingdom Council on Deafness 475
Bibliography 477
Index 496