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What does it mean to engage in Deaf Studies and who gets to define
the field? What would a truly deaf-led Deaf Studies research
program look like? What are the research practices of deaf scholars
in Deaf Studies, and how do they relate to deaf research
participants and communities? What innovations do deaf scholars
deem necessary in the field of Deaf Studies? In Innovation in Deaf
Studies: The Role of Deaf Scholars, volume editors Annelies
Kusters, Maartje De Meulder, and Dai O'Brien and their contributing
authors tackle these questions and more. Spurred by a gradual
increase in the number of Deaf Studies scholars who are deaf, and
by new theoretical trends in Deaf Studies, this book creates an
important space for contributions from deaf researchers, to see
what happens when they enter into the conversation. Innovation in
Deaf Studies expertly foregrounds deaf ontologies (defined as "deaf
ways of being") and how the experience of being deaf is central not
only to deaf research participants' own ontologies, but also to the
positionality and framework of the study as a whole. Further, this
book demonstrates that the research and methodology built around
those ontologies offer suggestions for new ways for the discipline
to meet the challenges of the present, which includes productive
and ongoing collaboration with hearing researchers. Providing
fascinating perspective and insight, Kusters, De Meulder, O'Brien,
and their contributors all focus on the underdeveloped strands
within Deaf Studies, particularly on areas around deaf people's
communities, ideologies, literature, religion, language practices,
and political aspirations.
Shared signing communities consist of a relatively high number of
hereditarily deaf people living together with hearing people in
relative isolation, one being the Akan village in Ghana called
Adamorobe. Annelies Kusters traveled to Adamorobe to conduct an
ethnographic study of both the deaf and hearing populations in the
village. She reveals how deaf people in Adamorobe did not live in a
social paradise but that they created their own "Deaf Space" by
seeking each other out to form a society of their own.
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