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Deaf Culture and Literacy

American Annals of the Deaf, 1993
D eaf culture has become an enormously popular term and its presence in deaf education has become much more visible, particularly in relation to the teaching of reading and writing to young deaf children. Likewise, although the term functional literacy is familiar, the word literacy used by itself is new and powerful. This term is being used in public,
C, Padden, C, Ramsey
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Deaf culture

The Nurse Practitioner, 2014
To successfully navigate in the hearing world, deaf individuals must be able to read and write to bridge the gap when others do not know American Sign Language. Unfortunately, 90% of deaf children are born to hearing parents and do not develop language skills early on, which negatively impacts their ability to access health information and healthcare ...
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The Culture of the Deaf

Journal of Transcultural Nursing, 1999
The population of the United States includes over 1 million deaf people, the majority of whom have chosen to differentiate themselves in terms of a Deaf culture. These Deaf people share unique values and norms and use sign language for communication. The differences that exist between hearing and Deaf individuals necessitate that the nurse understand ...
J A, Stebnicki, H V, Coeling
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Performing Deaf Culture

2021
Performativity and performance are key concepts in sign language literature and Deaf theatre, which both unveil the ideological and epistemological limits of such terms as language and literature and invite to consider the body itself as text. Becauseof itsoralnatureandface-to-facetransmission,whichatfirsttookplace mainly within
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Inside Deaf culture

Nature, 2004
Kate Nelson, an actor, is deaf. She explains to Carina Dennis what becoming part of Deaf culture has meant to her.
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Deaf Culture Prevails

Sign Language Studies, 2004
Deaf Culture Prevails Signs of Resistance: American Deaf Cultural History, 1900 to World War II by Susan Burch (New York and London: New York University Press, 2002. 240 pp., cloth $38.00) Gaillard in Deaf America: A Portrait of the Deaf Community, 1917 by Henri Gaillard, ed. Robert Buchanan, trans.
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Inside Deaf Culture

American Anthropologist, 2006
Inside Deaf Culture. Carol Padden and Tom Humphries. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005. 208 pp.
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Apprehending deaf culture

Journal of Applied Communication Research, 1995
(1995). Apprehending deaf culture. Journal of Applied Communication Research: Vol. 23, No. 2, pp. 156-162.
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Identity, deaf culture, and deaf community

Abstract Many children, adolescents, and adults who are deaf and their families value a deaf identity, membership of the deaf community, and participation in deaf culture. Some of them see cochlear implantation as potentially endangering identity formation that could result in negative effects on mental health.
Harry Knoors, Evelien Dirks
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Deaf Culture

Hastings Center Report, 1999
Stephan Haimowitz, Bonnie Tucker
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