Deaf Culture Essay

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    have always been very interested in the Deaf community and their culture. Some people think there is no culture different form everyone else with deaf people. I have had the opportunity to have a deaf child in my class and my daughter is medically known has hard of hearing. I got to see and experience how sign language and children experience with the community around them. I chose the Deaf Culture because I have always been interested in the Deaf culture after my daughter was on the edge of losing

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    Deaf Americans: Community and Culture

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    An average of 90% of all babies born deaf or with some type of hearing loss are born to hearing parents. Deafness can be caused by a variety of things both genetic and environmental. Upon learning their child is deaf, most hearing families try to find ways to fix what they feel is a defect. However, deaf families rejoice in their child's deafness because now they have another person to strengthen the deaf community and carry on the American Deaf culture. There are approximately 35 million people

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    that being deaf it was more difficult than being blind, “Blindness cuts people off from things; deafness cuts people off from people." (Harrington, 2000). Many hearing people, might think of a deaf person as defected, or handicapped, and pity them, but most people in Deaf communities do not think of themself as disabled or handicapped, they embraced the way they are, and turn a physiological difference, in to something beautiful, creating what we know today as Deaf culture. Deaf people as a

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    For years and years, Deaf people were shunned and oppressed. If you were a deaf person who created art that can blow a persons mind, you weren’t treated as if; you were isolated, an alien from a distant planet. As Deaf culture began to grow, Sign Language, beliefs and most importantly Art became a powerful focal point on the identities of each person in the Deaf community. Visualization is a vital concept in the life of a Deaf person. American Sign Language depends on visuals. Hand shape, Location

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    Deaf Culture What surprised you most about Deaf culture so far? The thing that surprised me the most is learning that most Deaf people would not want to be able to hear again if they were given the chance. Most people would think that a person with some kind of disability would do anything to get rid of it, but that is not the case with many Deaf people. This idea is slightly confusing to me because I am very certain that I would be willing to try to be able to get some kind of hearing back; it

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    Values are things that are most important to a culture. For persons who are deaf values are based on a visual orientation. Because Deaf people use sight most in life their culture is based on efficient and effortless visual access to the world. In the past residential schools were where most deaf people were able to socialize with each other. Much of Deaf culture was created by the people who attended these schools. . Deaf clubs are places where Deaf people can gather to socialize and feel accepted;

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    everyday scenarios that will never be a part of a deaf person’s life. ”360 million people worldwide have disabling hearing loss (1), and 32 million of these are children.” (Deafness and hearing loss Fact sheet, February 2017). Since having a hearing disability is common in society, everyone should learn how to communicate, and interact with the deaf people through their culture. So, what exactly is deaf culture? Deaf culture differs from hearing culture by having different language, social beliefs

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    History of deaf culture Timeline representing how far the deaf community has come. 384-322 B.C- In ancient greece the deaf are not allowed to have an education because they thought the deaf could not learn due to them not being able to hear. “Deaf people could not be educated since without hearing, people could not learn."- Aristotle A.D. 345-550- Christians think that deafness is a sign that their god is angry at them while few other religious groups for example monks put in effort to try and

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    My feeling was a bit surprised and complicated when I first hear that deaf parents want to conceive a deaf baby. Because if I have not taken any classes about deaf culture or prior to reading Candy and Sharon’s story, I would normally think it is unfair to the children to be born with disabilities, especially when the parents are already deaf who sure know the difficulties and obstacles that a deaf child will have to experience in the future. What if the child grew up and blamed the parents to make

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    embrace it as an identity, or a culture with their own language, sign language, and they believe their community is being threaten. They label themselves as a minority endangered of being wiped out because of one leading cause, cochlear implants. Those serious about their ideals of their community see cochlear implants as a threat, because cochlear implants are considered as cure. Countless number of controversies over cochlear implants have been brought up, but the Deaf community should see cochlear

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