jillio
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 14, 2006
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Read the book from Lane, and you will find that Lane disagree with you. The link you posted to the database with deaf ancestry, does not support your idea that Lane limits ethnicity to the people in that database. Notice the name of the database:"Deaf Ethnicity and Ancestry".
You are just showing everyone here how you make up facts that fit your views, and then repeats them, even if they are false. The question is, why you do this. The OP perhaps have some answers.
More from Lane: "The Deaf-World does pass its norms, knowledge, language, and values from one generation to the next: first through socialization of the child by Deaf adults (parent or other) and second through peer socialization. Here, however, there is a significant difference from other ethnic groups: For many Deaf children, socialization into Deaf culture starts late, usually when the Deaf child meets other Deaf children in school (Johnson & Erting, 1989). Members of the Deaf-World have a great handicap and a great advantage when it comes to intergenerational continuity. The handicap is that their hearing parents usually have a different ethnocultural identity that, lacking a shared language, they cannot pass on to their children."
I have found that those that are in the beginning of learning about Lane's concepts tend to misquote and take out of context. His concepts are very deep, and he cannot be taken out of context. That is when people begin to think he is saying something different than what he is saying. I know, in my readings, I have sometimes had to go back and re-read a passage just to be certain that I am understanding what he is saying. Some knowlege of sociological theory is very helpful in understanding his position. Personally, I would never have used Lane as a source to support my position until I had a strong understanding of the basics of culture and society because it is necessary to comprehend his laid out concepts. It would be like a Psych 101 student trying to interpret Freud's extensive theories. They can make an attempt, but their interpretation is full of errors.