Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Deaf_history> ?p ?o }
- Deaf_history abstract "The history of deaf people and their culture make up deaf history. The Deaf culture is an ethnocentric culture that is centered on sign language and relationships among one another. Unlike other cultures the Deaf culture is not associated with any native land as it is a global culture. Although by some, deafness may be viewed as a disability, the Deaf world sees itself as a language minority. Throughout the years many accomplishments have been achieved by deaf people. To name the most famous, Ludwig van Beethoven and Thomas Alva Edison were both deaf and contributed great works to culture.Like most people in other language minorities, deaf people are born into it. Unlike other cultures, deaf culture is not associated with a native land. It is actually a culture based on relationships among people providing common ground. The deaf culture sees itself as a language minority instead of a disability group.Deaf people who know Sign Language are proud of their history. In the United States, they recount the story of Laurent Clerc, a Deaf educator, coming to the United States from France in 1816 to help found the first permanent school for deaf children in the country. In the late 1850s there was a debate about whether or not to create a separate deaf state in the west. The idea was based on the event when the American Congress, at that time, gave part of Alabama to the American Asylum. This deaf state would be a place where all deaf people could migrate, if chosen to, and prosper, however, this plan failed and the whole debate died.Another well-known event is the 1880 Second International Congress on Education of the Deaf in Milan, Italy, where hearing educators voted to embrace oral education and remove sign language from the classroom. This effort resulted in strong opposition within Deaf cultures today to the oralist method of teaching deaf children to speak and lip read with limited or no use of sign language in the classroom. The method is intended to make it easier for deaf children to integrate into hearing communities, but there have been many arguments about whether the manual method (where the teachers teach Sign Language as the main way to communicate) or the Oral method (where the Teachers make the student learn to speak) are better. Most people now agree that the Manual Method is the preferred method of Deaf communication. The use of sign language is central to the Deaf peoples as a cultural identity and attempts to limit its use are viewed as an attack.".
- Deaf_history wikiPageID "2111998".
- Deaf_history wikiPageLength "26154".
- Deaf_history wikiPageOutDegree "112".
- Deaf_history wikiPageRevisionID "706598713".
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink 21st_Century_Communications_and_Video_Accessibility_Act.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Graham_Bell.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink American_School_for_the_Deaf.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink American_Sign_Language.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Americans_with_Disabilities_Act_of_1990.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Aristotle.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Ashley_Fiolek.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Auditory_system.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Braam_Jordaan.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Byzantine_Empire.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Calbraith_Perry_Rodgers.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Category:Deaf_culture.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Charles-Michel_de_lxc3x89pxc3xa9e.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Closed_captioning.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Cochlea.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Cochlear_implant.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Committee_on_Jewish_Law_and_Standards.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Conservative_Judaism.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Corpus_Juris_Civilis.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Cratylus.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Cultural_identity.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Culture.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Deaf_President_Now.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Deaf_culture.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Deaf_education.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Deaf_studies.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Demonic_possession.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Dummy_Hoy.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Miner_Gallaudet.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Ethnocentrism.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Federal_Communications_Commission.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Feminism.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Galen.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Gallaudet_University.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink George_Dalgarno.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Gerolamo_Cardano.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Halakha.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Hazzan.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Hearing.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Hearing_aid.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Heather_Whitestone.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink History_of_deaf_education_in_the_United_States.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink I._King_Jordan.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Individuals_with_Disabilities_Education_Act.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Johannes_Bohn.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink John_Bulwer.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink John_Wallis.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink John_of_Beverley.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Juan_Pablo_Bonet.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Juliette_Gordon_Low.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Justinian_I.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Leipzig.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Linguistics.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Lip_reading.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink List_of_deaf_people.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Ludwig_van_Beethoven.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Marlee_Matlin.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Matt_Hamill.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Melbourne.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Milan.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Minyan.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Mitzvah.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink National_Association_of_the_Deaf_(United_States).
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink National_Center_for_Law_and_the_Deaf.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Netflix.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Oralism.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink PBS.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Taylor_(engineer).
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Pedro_Ponce_de_León.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Pergamon.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Quintus_Pedius_(deaf_painter).
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Rehabilitation_Act_of_1973.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Weitbrecht.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Saint_Ovidius.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Samuel_Heinicke.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Second_International_Congress_on_Education_of_the_Deaf.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Sign_language.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Socrates.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Spain.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Supreme_Court_of_India.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Telecommunications_device_for_the_deaf.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Teresa_de_Cartagena.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink The_French_Chef.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Willis.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Torah.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink United_States.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Unity_for_Gallaudet.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Victoria_(Australia).
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink Victorian_College_for_the_Deaf.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink WGBH-TV.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink William_Holder.
- Deaf_history wikiPageWikiLink William_Stokoe.