Sunday, September 17, 2006

344: breaking down audism 2


VLOG WORKSHOP... sort of.... experimenting here! I wanted to examine audism more deeply, and composed some questions to cause debate with you all and your friends! It's a good time, a recent protest at Gallaudet was about audism; the students at the University feel the college has been paying lip service to the ideal but taking no action. What action they want hasn't been specified, although from much of the reading I have a fairly good idea. However - there's a lot of grey areas in audism. So GET SOME COFFEE and start thinking! (P.S. I'm testing out vlog formats, so I vlogged my introduction and explanations... maybe more later as I work with this new tool...)


A professor at a hearing University is approached by a student concerned about a movie used in class which is not subtitled. The student cannot use an interpreter, since the theater will be dark and the class is in the hundreds - not easy to move. Eventually the professor provides a script. Is this audism? Are there any colleges in the United States whose primary language is other than English? Note: this problem was reworded after the initial post to make it more sensible.


Two students are walking to Ely and see a total of twelve members of faculty and staff speaking, not signing. Is this audism? What if those members of faculty and staff had been using a sign language these two students did not know? What is the difference between fully accessible and fully comprehensible?

That 2nd question leads to a big question: if we fight for recognition in terms of culture and language, do we still have the right to ask for access, which is based on the disability model? Not every hearing person speaks every language! And thanks to DE for this next question which came from his class discussion:
Two hearing parents go to a doctor and ask the doctor about non-surgical procedures to deal with their child's Deafness. The doc doesn't mention ASL but terrifies the parents into getting a CI for their child which comes with a contract stating the child will not learn ASL for a specified number of years. Is this audism? What if the doctor talks about "maximizing your child's opportunities in life?" How do you respond to that? Is this a nature vs. nurture argument?

Await people's thoughts...
UPDATE: I realize lots of people not happy with the word "audism," but it's out there.

UPDATE II: How ironic I wrote this post, then went and read Ridor's post about his experiences with his family. I hate VRI. I really do.

3 comments:

JRS said...

Hi Cindy,

I badly worded the first statement and need to go back and reword it. It wasn't meant to be Gallaudet University, but another college, and to be based on my own experience with a teacher who provided a film for the class to watch one evening. The film was an amateur work and not subtitled. She eventually wrote up a text of the film to me, but of course I missed the point of the movie, since a movie is both text and image.

Ely center IS a place at Gallaudet (which is why I was confused - typing too fast!) At Gallaudet, there is a signing-all-the-time policy which is somewhat loosely followed.

The third example is unfortunately common in England, I do not know about America or if this is still common practice, but I do know implant corporations more recently advocate the use of ASL with CI-users.

Anonymous said...

Situation 1: Um...I think it ain't exactly audism; the professor didn't exactly deny the student access to information. However, I don't mean to imply that giving English text is the best solution for all situations.

Situation 2: To me, this is bordering on audism- when you are in a SIGNING environment, and you simply vocalize, that's blatant disrespect. I mean, those people already can sign, teach/work with the Deaf, and yet vocalize...gawd. They're telling us that vocalizing is better than signing. However, if they sign in a foreign sign language- sure! That still implies that Sign Languages are accessible, universal, etc.

Situation 3: Clear-cut audism. Perpetuating ignorance among parents is an act of audism itself, IMHO. And perpetuates the system of disadvantages for the Deaf. Audism in all its glory.

Now- I got a situation for y'all. Last week my partner Colin tried to purchase four strobe-based smoke detectors for our new home. The initial cost- $500. Colin strolled down and saw, "SHHH MEMBER? DISCOUNT!" (not exactly that, but you get the drift.) Guess what? $500 becomes $77 if you are a SHHH member. Never mind NAD, DCARA, whatever. And for a STROBE-based, not SOUND-based smoke detector. Reinforces my belief that this system disadvantages Deaf people- and rewards "residual hearing", no matter what.

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