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  1. catpiss_backpack • 3 yr. ago. There are some excellent Canadian Deaf History books too, hidden gems. Biography of Samuel Thomas Greene, Deaf Canadian Women in History, and I know a few are being written in British Columbia. Great list!

  2. It isn't just about "fixing a disability" for many deaf people. It's more a response to the historical (and feared current) forced erasure of a Deaf culture. There are Deaf languages (sign languages, of which there are many), unique vocabulary, shared experiences, and unique ways of communicating.

  3. Deaf/hearing impaired women of Reddit, how have you adapted to the world since the mask mandate/mask culture now that you can’t lip read. Extremely curious. Has it been endlessly difficult, what things have you learned?

  4. 12 Δεκ 2023 · ‘How Deaf people think’: oral versus sign languages. There is one image that went viral on Twitter that asks ‘In what language deaf people think in’? To understand the post we need to understand how the sign languages were subverted, and the oralist pedagogy became synonymous with intellectuality.

  5. 28 Απρ 2017 · Deaf females were found to have a lower understanding of health literacy and poorer healthy behaviors compared to their hearing counterparts.

  6. 29 Μαρ 2022 · The lived experience of deafness brings an authentic richness to the readers’ text understanding that is difficult to replicate. We also encourage deaf people to consider mentoring deaf youth. Many children and young people who are deaf live and study in isolation from other deaf people.

  7. 20 Ιουλ 2021 · In the case of deaf women, three identities are at play-race, gender and disability. Deafness crosses the barriers of gender, ethnicity, age, and economic status (Sporek 2014), thereby placing deaf women, more specifically black deaf women (Chapple 2019) at a risk for marginalisation.