Deaf in Japan

Signing And the Politics of Identity

Paperback, 226 pages

English language

Published Aug. 2, 2006 by Cornell University Press.

ISBN:
9780801473562
Goodreads:
643511

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Until the mid-1970s, deaf people in Japan had few legal rights and little social recognition. Legally, they were classified as minors or mentally deficient, unable to obtain driver's licenses or sign contracts and wills. Many worked at menial tasks or were constantly unemployed, and schools for the deaf taught a difficult regimen of speechreading and oral speech methods rather than signing. After several decades of activism, deaf men and women are now largely accepted within mainstream Japanese society. Deaf in Japan, a groundbreaking study of deaf identity, minority politics, and sign language, traces the history of the deaf community in Japan, from the establishment of the first schools for the deaf in the 1870s to the birth of deaf activist movements in the postwar period and current "culture wars" over signing and assimilation. Drawing on archival and ethnographic research and in-depth interviews with deaf men and women from three generations, …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Asian / Middle Eastern history: postwar, from c 1945 -
  • Social & cultural anthropology
  • 21st century
  • Sign Language
  • Social Science
  • Archaeology / Anthropology
  • Sociology
  • Japan
  • Anthropology - Cultural
  • Asia - Japan
  • Deaf
  • Group identity
  • History
  • Japanese Sign Language
  • Disabilities