What is the opposite of an audist?
An ally
To live with one foot in familial culture and one foot into their home culture, what is that called?
Cultural duality
What is the term for the culture, language, history, etc. of a people group?
Ethnicity
Is American culture a low-context or a high-context culture?
Low-context
Defined as people who originally resided in the land but were forcibly removed.
Indigenous Peoples
What do dDeaf people require?
(2)
Sustained eye contact
Bachchanneling
What is the term for original inhabitants?
Aboriginal
What is an informal or unprofessional translation of information (like a child translating for their parents)?
Language Broker
What is a small group of people who are often discriminated against in a community, either by society or on a national level, because their language, race, or beliefs differ?
Minority
What are some cultural ways of getting a dDeaf individual's attention? (4)
Tapping
Waving
Light flashing
Stomping/pounding
What is the term for the physical characteristics of people that are considered significant on a social scale?
Race
What is a form of domination by controlling groups/individuals, which is demonstrated through the exploitation of that group's culture and language?
Colonialism
What is a process where two cultures come into contact, which changes one or both cultural groups?
Acculturation
What is the belief that the needs, preferences, and desires of the individual are stressed over the needs of the whole?
Individualism
In what year and by whom was the term audism created?
In 1975, by Tom Humphries
What is a means to share the value systems of dDeaf peoples as a unique people who are "visuo-gesturo-tactile" biological entities, that believe they offer a different and positive perspective on what it means to be human?
Deafhood
What are two of audism effects?
(out of these:)
Institutionalized oppression
Ambivalence
Fatalism or passivity
Horizontal violence
Benefactors are perfect
Emotional dependence on the oppressor
Fear of freedom
What are 3 different ways culture can be defined by?
(of these answers) Family and our place in it, Gender, Social and sexual experience, Economic status, Educational experiences, Physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual development, Temperament, or personality type
A term used by medical professionals to define dDeaf people.
Medical Model
What were the two world views mentioned?
Individualistic culture and Collectivist culture
“If a woman is dDeaf of First Nation Canadian heritage; she is all of these, yet she is each of them.”
This is an example of her what?
Intersectionality
What are the three attitudes of an audist?
Oppressive, Prejudiced, and Uninformed
Name five categories privilege is based on.
(of these answers)
Social Status
Age
Education
Ethnic Identity
Racial Identity
Gender Identity
Sexual Identity
Marital Status
Religion
Physical fitness
Mental health
Features or characters that are most commonly utilized when organizing Schema are...?
(5)
Physical
Role
Interactions
Psychological
Membership
Name the three reasons hearing people often mistake dDeaf people as angry.
Facial expressions
Vocalizations
Speed of signs