The personal is political in The Deaf Mute Howls: deaf epistemology seeks disability justice

被引:19
|
作者
Robinson, Octavian E. [1 ]
Henner, Jonathan [2 ]
机构
[1] Coll Holy Cross, Dept Modern Languages & Literatures, Worcester, MA 01610 USA
[2] Univ N Carolina, Dept Specialized Educ Serv, Greensboro, NC USA
关键词
Disability justice; accessibility; inclusion; language deprivation; deaf studies; deaf epistemology; AMERICAN SIGN-LANGUAGE; LINGUISTIC INTERDEPENDENCE; READING-COMPREHENSION; EDUCATION; CHILDREN; COMMUNICATION; 2ND-LANGUAGE; ACQUISITION; AGE; ORGANIZATION;
D O I
10.1080/09687599.2017.1313723
中图分类号
R49 [康复医学];
学科分类号
100215 ;
摘要
This article builds on Carol Padden and Tom Humphries' assertion that culturally identified deaf people inhabit a different center of knowledge than the non-deaf. Over generations of inhabiting a different center, deaf people have developed and transmitted embodied knowledge. The core of this knowledge is the role of sign language in developing language, cognition, and social structures. Modern fields of science search for truth by deconstructing false narratives. That is, anything worth being scientific is worth testing. While this approach may be effective for science, it devalues community knowledge since core tenets have no value until they are tested. To illustrate this, we critique a literary work, The Deaf Mute Howls, by deaf writer Albert Ballin in 1930. His work is particularly compelling because he suggests a radical approach to disability justice. Many of his claims were later verified by science, which presents questions about future research praxis centering deaf epistemology.
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页码:1416 / 1436
页数:21
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