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Community and Culture - Frequently Asked Questions | National Association of the Deaf

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Otherwise, please be patient as we work out the IE6 rendering issues on this website.</p> <p>If you want to you may also try some other popular Internet browsers like <a class="ie6expl" href="http://getfirefox.com">Firefox</a>, <a class="ie6expl" href="http://www.opera.com">Opera</a>, or <a class="ie6expl" href="http://www.apple.com/safari/download/">Safari</a></p> </div> <![endif]--> <div class="box articles"> <div class="block" id="subpageleft"> <div class="breadcrumbbox"> <div id="front"></div> <div id="link"> <div class="breadcrumb"><a href="/web/20151227171131/http://nad.org/">Home</a> » <a href="/web/20151227171131/http://nad.org/issues/issues-resources">Issues &amp; Resources</a> » <a href="/web/20151227171131/http://nad.org/issues/american-sign-language">American Sign Language</a></div> </div> <div id="end"></div> </div> <br/><br/> <div class="first article"> <div id="node-43" class="node"> <div class="content clear-block"> <p><strong>Question -- What is the difference between a person who is &ldquo;deaf,&rdquo; &ldquo;Deaf,&rdquo; or &ldquo;hard of hearing&rdquo;?</strong></p> <p>The deaf and hard of hearing community is diverse.&nbsp; There are variations in how a person becomes deaf or hard of hearing, level of hearing, &nbsp;age of onset, educational background, communication methods, and cultural identity.&nbsp; How people &ldquo;label&rdquo; or identify themselves is personal and may reflect identification with the deaf and hard of hearing community, the degree to which they can hear, or the relative age of onset.&nbsp; For example, some people identify themselves as &ldquo;late-deafened,&rdquo; indicating that they became deaf later in life.&nbsp; Other people identify themselves as &ldquo;deaf-blind,&rdquo; which usually indicates that they are deaf or hard of hearing and also have some degree of vision loss.&nbsp; Some people believe that the term &ldquo;people with hearing loss&rdquo; is inclusive and efficient.&nbsp; However, some people who were born deaf or hard of hearing do not think of themselves as having lost their hearing.&nbsp; Over the years, the most commonly accepted terms have come to be &ldquo;deaf,&rdquo; &ldquo;Deaf,&rdquo; and &ldquo;hard of hearing.&rdquo;</p> <p><strong>&ldquo;Deaf&rdquo; and &ldquo;deaf&rdquo;</strong></p> <p>According to Carol Padden and Tom Humphries, in <em>Deaf in America: Voices from a Culture</em> (1988):</p> <blockquote><p>We use the lowercase deaf when referring to the audiological condition of not hearing, and the uppercase Deaf when referring to a particular group of deaf people who share a language &ndash; American Sign Language (ASL) &ndash; and a culture.&nbsp; The members of this group have inherited their sign language, use it as a primary means of communication among themselves, and hold a set of beliefs about themselves and their connection to the larger society.&nbsp; We distinguish them from, for example, those who find themselves losing their hearing because of illness, trauma or age; although these people share the condition of not hearing, they do not have access to the knowledge, beliefs, and practices that make up the culture of Deaf people.</p> </blockquote> <p>Padden and Humphries comment, &ldquo;this knowledge of Deaf people is not simply a camaraderie with others who have a similar physical condition, but is, like many other cultures in the traditional sense of the term, historically created and actively transmitted across generations.&rdquo;&nbsp; The authors also add that Deaf people &ldquo;have found ways to define and express themselves through their rituals, tales, performances, and everyday social encounters.&nbsp; The richness of their sign language affords them the possibilities of insight, invention, and irony.&rdquo;&nbsp; The relationship Deaf people have with their sign language is a strong one, and &ldquo;the mistaken belief that ASL is a set of simple gestures with no internal structure has led to the tragic misconception that the relationship of Deaf people to their sign language is a casual one that can be easily severed and replaced.&rdquo;&nbsp; (Padden &amp; Humphries)</p> <p><strong>&ldquo;Hard of Hearing&rdquo;</strong></p> <blockquote><p>&ldquo;Hard-of-hearing&rdquo; can denote a person with a mild-to-moderate hearing loss.&nbsp; Or it can denote a deaf person who doesn&rsquo;t have/want any cultural affiliation with the Deaf community.&nbsp; Or both.&nbsp; The HOH dilemma:&nbsp; in some ways hearing, in some ways deaf, in others, neither.</p> <p>Can one be hard-of-hearing and ASL-Deaf?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s possible, too.&nbsp; Can one be hard-of-hearing and function as hearing?&nbsp; Of course.&nbsp; What about being hard-of-hearing and functioning as a member of both the hearing and Deaf communities?&nbsp; That&rsquo;s a delicate tightrope-balancing act, but it too is possible.</p> <p>As for the political dimension:&nbsp; HOH people can be allies of the Deaf community.&nbsp; They can choose to join or to ignore it.&nbsp; They can participate in the social, cultural, political, and legal life of the community along with culturally-Deaf or live their lives completely within the parameters of the &ldquo;Hearing world.&rdquo;&nbsp; But they may have a more difficult time establishing a satisfying cultural/social identity.</p> <p><em>Deaf Life, </em>&ldquo;For Hearing People Only&rdquo; (October 1997).</p> </blockquote> <p>Individuals can choose an audiological or cultural perspective.&nbsp; It&rsquo;s all about choices, comfort level, mode of communication, and acceptance.&nbsp; Whatever the decision, the NAD welcomes all Deaf, deaf, hard of hearing, late-deafened, and deaf-blind Americans, and the advocacy work that the NAD does is available to and intended to benefit everyone.</p> <p><strong>Question -- What is wrong with the use of these terms &ldquo;deaf-mute,&rdquo; &ldquo;deaf and dumb,&rdquo; or &ldquo;hearing-impaired&rdquo;?</strong></p> <p>Deaf and hard of hearing people have the right to choose what they wish to be called, either as a group or on an individual basis.&nbsp; Overwhelmingly, deaf and hard of hearing people prefer to be called &ldquo;deaf&rdquo; or &ldquo;hard of hearing.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nearly all organizations of the deaf use the term &ldquo;deaf and hard of hearing,&rdquo; and the NAD is no exception. &nbsp;</p> <p>Yet there are many people who persist in using terms other than &ldquo;deaf&rdquo; and &ldquo;hard of hearing.&rdquo;&nbsp; The alternative terms are often seen in print, heard on radio and television, and picked up in casual conversations all over.&nbsp; Let&rsquo;s take a look at the three most-used alternative terms.</p> <p><strong>Deaf and Dumb</strong> -- A relic from the medieval English era, this is the granddaddy of all negative labels pinned on deaf and hard of hearing people.&nbsp; The Greek philosopher, Aristotle, pronounced us &ldquo;deaf and dumb,&rdquo; because he felt that deaf people were incapable of being taught, of learning, and of reasoned thinking.&nbsp; To his way of thinking, if a person could not use his/her voice in the same way as hearing people, then there was no way that this person could develop cognitive abilities.&nbsp; (Source: <em>Deaf Heritage</em>, by Jack Gannon, 1980)</p> <p>In later years, &ldquo;dumb&rdquo; came to mean &ldquo;silent.&rdquo;&nbsp; This definition still persists, because that is how people see deaf people.&nbsp; The term is offensive to deaf and hard of hearing people for a number of reasons.&nbsp; One, deaf and hard of hearing people are by no means &ldquo;silent&rdquo; at all.&nbsp; They use sign language, lip-reading, vocalizations, and so on to communicate.&nbsp; Communication is not reserved for hearing people alone, and using one&rsquo;s voice is not the only way to communicate.&nbsp; Two, &ldquo;dumb&rdquo; also has a second meaning:&nbsp; stupid.&nbsp; Deaf and hard of hearing people have encountered plenty of people who subscribe to the philosophy that if you cannot use your voice well, you don&rsquo;t have much else &ldquo;upstairs,&rdquo; and have nothing going for you.&nbsp; Obviously, this is incorrect, ill-informed, and false.&nbsp; Deaf and hard of hearing people have repeatedly proved that they have much to contribute to the society at large.</p> <p><strong>Deaf-Mute</strong> &ndash; Another offensive term from the 18th-19th century, &ldquo;mute&rdquo; also means silent and without voice.&nbsp; This label is technically inaccurate, since deaf and hard of hearing people generally have functioning vocal chords.&nbsp; The challenge lies with the fact that to successfully modulate your voice, you generally need to be able to hear your own voice.&nbsp; Again, because deaf and hard of hearing people use various methods of communication other than or in addition to using their voices, they are not truly mute.&nbsp; True communication occurs when one&rsquo;s message is understood by others, and they can respond in kind.</p> <p><strong>Hearing-impaired</strong> &ndash; This term is no longer accepted by most in the community but was at one time preferred, largely because it was viewed as politically correct.&nbsp; To declare oneself or another person as deaf or blind, for example, was considered somewhat bold, rude, or impolite.&nbsp; At that time, it was thought better to use the word &ldquo;impaired&rdquo; along with &ldquo;visually,&rdquo; &ldquo;hearing,&rdquo; &ldquo;mobility,&rdquo; and so on.&nbsp; &ldquo;Hearing-impaired&rdquo; was a well-meaning term that is not accepted or used by many deaf and hard of hearing people.</p> <p>For many people, the words &ldquo;deaf&rdquo; and &ldquo;hard of hearing&rdquo; are not negative.&nbsp; Instead, the term &ldquo;hearing-impaired&rdquo; is viewed as negative.&nbsp; The term focuses on what people can&rsquo;t do.&nbsp; It establishes the standard as &ldquo;hearing&rdquo; and anything different as &ldquo;impaired,&rdquo; or substandard, hindered, or damaged.&nbsp; It implies that something is not as it should be and ought to be fixed if possible.&nbsp; To be fair, this is probably not what people intended to convey by the term &ldquo;hearing impaired.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p> <p>Every individual is unique, but there is one thing we all have in common:&nbsp; we all want to be treated with respect.&nbsp; To the best of our own unique abilities, we have families, friends, communities, and lives that are just as fulfilling as anyone else.&nbsp; We may be different, but we are not less.&nbsp;</p> <p>What&rsquo;s in a name?&nbsp; Plenty!&nbsp; Words and labels can have a profound effect on people.&nbsp; Show your respect for people by refusing to use outdated or offensive terms.&nbsp; 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