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Responses of Jamaican and American Deaf Groups to Stigma

Responses of Jamaican and American Deaf Groups to Stigma

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Author: Jennifer Maria Keane-dawes
Publisher: University Press of America
Category: Book

List Price: $46.50
Buy New: $34.98
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New (2) Used (2) from $34.98

Sales Rank: 5517725

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 146
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 8.7 x 5.7 x 0.7

ISBN: 0761806520
Dewey Decimal Number: 305.908162
EAN: 9780761806523
ASIN: 0761806520

Publication Date: August 29, 1997
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available
Condition: Brand New Hardcover issued without DJ, direct from publisher. NO marks. Ships immediately. FREE UPGRADE TO PRIORITY AIRMAIL FOR INTERNATIONAL ORDERS

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Responses of Jamaican and American Deaf Groups to Stigma asserts that Goffman's 1963 theory of stigma does not account for cultural variables which affect how deaf individuals deal with the perception that deafness is negatively different and that deaf individuals in selected cultures use different rules to contend with this perception. The people studied for this book were between eighteen and twenty-two years of age, and were from educational institutions in Jamaica and the United States. The book reveals several important points. First, that stigma is transactional. Deaf persons locate stigma in the sender, as they exert control over their communication interactions, they become agents in the transaction between themselves and hearing persons. Second, deaf persons who regard themselves as part of the deaf culture are proud of their cultural identity and do not defensively cower as Goffman suggests. And third, the metatheoretical assumptions of the interpretive paradigm guided the study to facilitate the emergence of another perspective on stigma from the voices of deaf persons themselves and not from a nomothetic covering law. The book also makes several suggestions to the Jamaican Government, African American and White American researchers who are deaf, as well as to the historically Black college, Howard University, to facilitate communication between the deaf and hearing cultures.

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