Title: Culture of Disability
1Culture of Disability
2Aims
- To gain knowledge and understanding of the
psycho-social foundations of Deaf culture - To analyse the content of an interview with Susan
Daniels, Chief Executive, National Deaf
Childrens Society from psychological
perspectives - To actively participate in Ms Chloe Stoakes
question and answer session to gain an awareness
of personal Deaf issues
3What is Culture?
- What constitutes membership of a cultural group?
- Set of learned behaviours of a group of people
who have their own language , values, rules for
behaviours and traditions (Padden Humphries,
1988)
4Disability Culture
- Is there such a thing?
- Should there be?
- Would you include all disabilities?
- What forms and approaches should answers to these
questions take?
5What is disability culture?
- A celebration of the uniqueness of disability
- A positive development
- Positive change of attitude, systems laws,
through shared thought and action - A notion that people with disability are
contributing members to society - How might this be done?
- A means by which people with different
disabilities can pursue their own as well as
shared goals - A spirit or energy
- A dignified voice
6What is hoped to be achieved?
- Stimulates debate
- Challenges myths
- Cultural contributions can be made
- Shatters images of disabled people as needy
- Reinforces idea that people with disability are
not only consumers of services but have something
to offer - Moves away from the notion of inclusion to one
that encourages disabled people to drive societal
structures.
7Deafness as an Impairment
- Deafness as disability
- Rehabilitation Education (Butler, Skelton
Valentine, 2001 Lane, 1997) - Impairment
- Unable to enjoy mainstream culture (e.g. music)
- Cochlear implants, hearing aids, lip reading
(Higgins, 1990) Kronick, 1990) - Deafness is just one group (Turner, 1994)
8Deafness as Culture
- Psychosocial theories
- Stigma, language, prejudice
- Factors that transform deafness from a stigma to
a cultural identity - How has deafness (historically labelled as a
disability) become the basis for cultural
identification? - Does it constitute a culture?
9External Barriers
- Prejudice
- Stigma is the label
- Prejudice is the attitude (Herek Capitanio,
1999). - Prejudice .is commonly defined as negative
feeling toward persons based solely on their
group membership (Devine, 1995486) - Prejudice against a certain group by others
functions as an act of cohesion among persons who
belong to that group.
10Stigma
- Stigma
- Deafness viewed as a disability
- Cultural Model
- Maintenance of a sense of self-worth
- Person who is deaf is more comfortable with peers
who are Deaf (Foster Brown, 1988) - Separation from the concept of non-normality
and disability - Bound together by the experience of deafness
- Deafness does not signify loss but a distinctive
perspective of the world (Dolnick, 1993) (not a
pathology) - Reaction against not being able to to be fully
integrated into the mainstream (Lane, 1992)
11Group Dynamics
- In-group and Out-group
- Stigma
- Goffman (1997) tainted and discounted rather
than whole and usual people - An attribute that is discredited by others
- Plays an important role in group formation
- Can transform stigma as a basis for group
identification (e.g. racial and religious
minorities, gays) (Brewer, 1991)
12Group Membership
- Sign Language
- First language
- Foundation of pro-Deaf culture advocacy
- Pure signers (acquire the language before the age
of 6) - Recognise the approximate age at which a person
acquired sign language by the way they use facial
expressions. - Signifies group membership
- Threat to the use of sign language
- Threat to the efficacy of Deaf culture.
- Cochlear implants
- National Association of the Deaf (NAD)
- Delay in acquiring sign language skills and
developing identity as a deaf person (culturally
homeless) (Lane, 1992) - Attitudinal Deafness
- Determines membership (paralleled by proper
language use
13An exclusive club?
- Prejudice against hearing
- Hearing has a negative connotation (James
Parton, 1991) - Objection to Deaf culture model
- Prejudice against
- use of oral methods of communication (Wilcox,
1989) - cochlear implants (Mascia Smithdas, 1994)
- hearing professionals who work in the area of
deafness (Lane, 1992) - families, neighbours and work colleagues
(Dolnick, 1993) - Hearing parents have to accept that the Deaf
child can never be one hundred percent theirs
(Dolnick, 199351) - Why?
- Increases the value of membership to the Deaf
culture
14Final Thought
15Susan DanielsChief ExecutiveNational Deaf
Childrens Society