Deaf Empowerment

Emergence, Struggle, and Rhetoric

Hardcover, 197 pages

English language

Published April 29, 1997 by Gallaudet University Press.

ISBN:
9781563680618
OCLC Number:
36713131
Goodreads:
578490

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Employing the methodology successfully used to explore other social movements in America, this meticulous study examines the rhetorical foundation that motivated Deaf people to work for social change during the past two centuries. In clear, concise prose, Jankowski begins by explaining her use of the term social movement in relation to the desire for change among Deaf people and analyzes the rhetoric they used, not limited to spoken language, to galvanize effective action.

Central to Deaf Empowerment is the struggle between the dominant hearing society and Deaf people over the best means of communication, with the educational setting as the constant battleground. This evocative work first tracks the history of interaction between these two factions, highlighting the speaking majority’s desire to compel Deaf people to conform to “the human sciences” conventionality by learning speech. Then, it sharply focuses on the development of the Deaf social movement's ideology to seek general …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Nonfiction
  • Deaf Culture
  • Deaf Hard of Hearing
  • Disability
  • History
  • US History