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Böcker utgivna av Gallaudet University Press,U.S.

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  • av Emily Shaw
    859

    Through rigorous study of historical texts, field research in communities throughout France and the US, and in-depth analysis of the cultural groups responsible for the lexicon, the authors present a detailed account of the origins of over 500 ASL signs, including regional variations. It is organized alphabetically by equivalent English glosses.

  •  
    999

    A collection that consists of ten chapters contributed by a broad array of international scholars addressing diverse topics while using a variety of methodological approaches including ethnography, questionnaires, observation, and diary accounts. It is suitable for researchers, practitioners, and students, as well as all healthcare professionals.

  • - International Insights
    av Melanie Metzger
    789,-

    A collection featuring 17 widely respected scholars who depict the everyday practices of deaf interpreters in their respective nations. It presents the history of Deaf translators and interpreters and details the development of testing and accreditation to raise their professional profiles.

  • - Understanding the Historical Roots of American Sign Language
    av Ted Supalla & Patricia Clark
    795,-

    A study that investigates the infancy of American Sign Language (ASL). It highlights the major events in ASL history, analyzes the metalinguistic assumptions of these early accounts and also examine in depth a key set of films made by the National Association of the Deaf (NAD) between 1910 and 1920.

  • - One Young Deaf Woman's Education
    av Anne Darby Getty
    375,-

    Kyler Daniels was born deaf in 1988. Unlike other deaf children, Kyler's parents jumped into action to find the best way to educate their daughter. They sought out every possible resource to aid their daughter. This book tells Kyler's story that can serve as a model for parents of other deaf children and the professionals who work with them.

  • - Religious Rhetoric and the Preservation of Sign Language
    av Tracy Ann Morse
    545,-

    Traces the intertwining of Protestant religion and the development of the deaf community from the nineteenth to twenty-first century. The author highlights the role of missionary movements in the spread of sign language; and shows how film and stage productions drew on religious themes in their portrayal of the deaf community and its struggles.

  • - Making Life Better for Deaf and Hard of Hearing School Children
    av Gina A. Oliva
    375,-

    Deaf students in mainstream schools face many challenges, but one particularly difficult situation is relatively little studied: being the only deaf student in the entire school. This book offers a qualitative study of the experiences of deaf and hard of hearing students in that situation.

  • - A Memoir
    av Donna McDonald
    375,-

    When she was five, the author was placed in an oral deaf school. There, she was trained to communicate only in spoken English. Her determination led to achievements that caused many to identify her as a "deaf girl that had made good." This book tells her story.

  • - 150 Years of a Deaf American Institution
    av David F. Armstrong
    889,-

    Published to commemorate Gallaudet University's 150th anniversary, this book traces the historic path that Gallaudet traveled to become the finest institution of higher education for deaf people throughout the world.

  • - Communication Access for Deaf Children
    av Lawrence J. Siegel
    589,-

    In 1982, the US Supreme Court ruled that Amy Rowley, a deaf six-year-old, was not entitled to have a sign language interpreter in her public school classroom. The author offers a counter argument, contending that the Constitution should protect every child's right to communication and language as part of an individual's right to liberty.

  • - Local Lives, Transnational Connections
    av Jan-Kare Breivik
    589,-

    Profiles ten Norwegian Deaf people, and their life stories within a translocal/transnational framework. The author notes that deaf individuals find themselves distanced from their own families, and akin to other deaf people in far locations. The ten stories in this book reveal deaf people who would like a stronger link to the Deaf world.

  • av Virginia Gutman
    845,-

  • - Power, Politics and Deaf Education
    av Linda R. Komesaroff
    545,-

    Komesaroff exposes the power of the entrenched dominant groups and their influence on the politics of policy and practice in the education of deaf students.

  • - Understanding Language and Literacy Development
     
    945,-

    The difficulty that deaf and hard-of-hearing students have in attaining language and literacy skills has led many scholars to attribute their struggle to a developmental deficit. However, in this study, the contributors present research findings of the Qualitative Similarity Hypothesis, which debunks such theories.

  • - Exploring the Nature of Sign
    av David A. Stewart & Jerome D. Schein
    455,-

  • - Portrayals in Ancient Texts from the Tanach Through the Bavli
    av Judith Z. Abrams
    785,-

  • - International Variation in Deaf Communities
    av Leila Monaghan
    865

    Circles the globe - from Asia and Russia to Europe and the United Kingdom, from Africa to South America to the United States - profiling the immense diversity of the world's Deaf communities.

  • av John Vickrey Van Cleve
    565,-

    Based on scholarship presented at a 2003 conference held at Gallaudet University, this title includes thirteen essays that explores the complex sociological interplay between genetics and deafness, as viewed by a distinguished panel of scholars and scientists from the platforms of their respective disciplines.

  • - From Carnival to the Canon
    av Cynthia Peters
    725,-

    Uses the archetypal concept of the carnival as a framework to interpret the evolution of ASL literature. This title shows how Deaf artists and ASL performers have used and continue to use their art as a means to traverse the barriers between disenfranchisement and privilege.

  • - Deaf Culture, Identity, Language, and Arts
     
    1 009

    Addresses the effects of a range of modern scientific and social developments - such as cochlear implants, genetic engineering, and educational mainstreaming - on deaf culture. This book splits into three sections, the first focusing on culture and identity, the second on language and literacy, and the third on American Sign Language in the arts.

  • av Miako N. P. Rankin
    945,-

    The meaning of any linguistic expression resides not only in the words, but in the way those words are conveyed. This title explores this crucial interrelatedness of form and meaning in the context of American Sign Language, specifically in relation to the concept of non-agent focus - the ASL equivalent of the passive voice in English.

  • av Jennifer L. Nelson
    689,-

    Showcases the work of Deaf writers from 1830 to 1930 during a critical formative period in their history. In this title, excerpted works include autobiographies, travel narratives, romances, nonfiction, short stories, editorials, descriptive pieces, and other forms of prose.

  • av Elizabeth A. Winston
    789,-

    Brings together a cadre of world-renowned educators and researchers who conduct an exploration of paradigms, both old and new, in interpreter education.

  • - A Novel
    av Douglas Bullard
    489,-

    Tells the story of Lyson Sulla, a Deaf man entirely despondent of the feeling that "the hearing think deaf means dumb," who sets out to establish a sovereign Deaf state on an island called Islay. This book charts Sulla's quest across the nation to rally support and recruit citizens, and his subsequent efforts to become elected state's governor.

  • - Living the Life
    av Scott M. Stoffel
    589,-

    For individuals who are both deaf and blind, even the most commonplace of tasks can pose immense challenges. This title paints an honest and compelling picture of the overlooked realities of living with multiple physical disabilities.

  • av Jack R. Gannon
    589,-

    In 200 full-color and black-and-white photographs, The Week the World Heard Gallaudet depicts, day by day, the Deaf President Now! Revolution at Gallaudet University as it unfolded March 6 - 13, 1988. Author Jack Gannon interviewed such main characters as Greg Hlibok, president of the student government, and Elizabeth Zinser, the University's president for two days. I. King Jordan, Gallaudet's first deaf president, contributed the epilogue.

  • - The Robert F. Panara Story
    av Harry G. Lang
    375,-

  • - Sociolinguistics in European Deaf Communities
     
    889,-

    Volume 10 of the series explores sociolinguistics in various European Deaf communities in Finland, Belgium, Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Sweden, Spain and the United Kingdom.

  • - A Memoir
    av Madan Vasishta
    375,-

    In 1952, after two weeks of typhoid fever and mumps, 11-year-old Madan Vasishta awoke one night to discover that he could no longer hear. He was horrified because in India, the word "deaf" described someone who was not really human. This autobiography reveals how his boundless optimism enabled him to persist and prevail.

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