Racism/Audism and Postdeafness Immunity Challenge

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Across
  1. 1. Later, the author “LD” states he sees himself in the “________________” to show that he is an important contributor to making the world “vibrant and stimulating” and that diversity is essential. (p238)
  2. 4. The author states “I BELIEVE THAT DEAF PEOPLE, LIKE BLACK PEOPLE, ARE VICTIMS OF [THE] CULTURE OF _________” (p248)
  3. 7. The overlapping of Race, Gender, Socioeconomic Status, Sexual Orientation, Deafness with regard to identity
  4. 8. As Davis explains, the notion of challenging the established ideas of how DEAF people identify themselves is known as ________________
  5. 10. Beginning in the late 19th century, a shift was made to “improve the human race” and _________ considered a “cure” for the Deaf “race”.
  6. 11. Dunn uses this antagonist to argue that most preconceived ideas about race and disability from a position of __________ are ridiculous, including the notion that ‘raising black or deaf children without fixing them is abuse.’
  7. 12. When looking to identify the deaf community, this group does not fit the “language minority” deaf identity.
  8. 15. The stage of Hardiman and Jackson's Racial Identity Theory that correlates to “interaction and more understanding of deaf people” (p245)
  9. 16. One problem with the “Ethnicity model” of Deafness is that this model assumes you can only be ____ ethnicity.
Down
  1. 2. The final step on Neil Glickman’s Deaf Identity Development Scale (p242)
  2. 3. As society progressed, there have been many changes in the acceptable terminology that is used. For example, race changed to ethnicity and eugenics changed in to ________
  3. 5. Dunn concludes by referencing Delpit’s description of the culture of power, where she suggests that “Those with power are frequently least aware of or least willing to acknowledge its existence. Those with ____________ are often most aware of its existence.” (p248)
  4. 6. Dunn makes his point through the use of a fictional antagonist known as ____________ (p235)
  5. 9. When discussing the idea of a deaf man enjoying an interpreted performance of Othello, WHM’s difficulty understanding this concept stems from his inability to see sign language as ______________ to english. (p240)
  6. 13. In chapter 14, author Lindsey Dunn compares audism with ____________
  7. 14. The other links several ideas/problems with Identity Politics, including: Historically, identity is linked to idea of inherited traits (genetic), groups are stigmatized as having bad blood, bad genes, disease, that Postmodern thought having an effect, that DNA sequencing/mapping does not show racial variation, and that it is problematic to have _____ categories and binary choices.