AJWSmith
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- Apr 19, 2011
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I wonder if people can help me think through defining audism.
Many people use the analogy with racism and it is a helpful analogy. But there is a difference between the two and it is this difference I want to explore.
I wish I could think of a better word, but the difference is about "function" (feel free to suggest a better term). A person of one colour skin is functionally the same as person with a different colour skin. So when a racist claims that one race is superior than another, this is easily seen as prejudice.
But a deaf person lacks the function of hearing (or more precisely, hearing speech well enough to participate in oral conversation). So when hearing people compare themselves with deaf people, they notice this missing function. And it is a function they find incredibly useful and valuable in their daily lives. So most hearing people are not consciously thinking they are superior human beings, but rather they have function that's missing in deaf people. In the same way a deaf person may look at a paralyzed person and see that they're missing the function of walking.
To me, audism is going one step further; moving from noticing the missing function to believing that having this functionality makes them a superior human being. Using the racism analogy - it's not when a person notices the different skin colour that they're racist, it's when they believe they have a superior skin colour.
I recognize that we can have unconscious prejudices, and these cause real pain to the victims. But one of my desires in posting this thread is finding a way to distinguish between narrow-minded people from those whose hearts are in the right place - it's just that they haven't had anyone show them that it is possible to live a fulfilling life without the function of hearing.
Many people use the analogy with racism and it is a helpful analogy. But there is a difference between the two and it is this difference I want to explore.
I wish I could think of a better word, but the difference is about "function" (feel free to suggest a better term). A person of one colour skin is functionally the same as person with a different colour skin. So when a racist claims that one race is superior than another, this is easily seen as prejudice.
But a deaf person lacks the function of hearing (or more precisely, hearing speech well enough to participate in oral conversation). So when hearing people compare themselves with deaf people, they notice this missing function. And it is a function they find incredibly useful and valuable in their daily lives. So most hearing people are not consciously thinking they are superior human beings, but rather they have function that's missing in deaf people. In the same way a deaf person may look at a paralyzed person and see that they're missing the function of walking.
To me, audism is going one step further; moving from noticing the missing function to believing that having this functionality makes them a superior human being. Using the racism analogy - it's not when a person notices the different skin colour that they're racist, it's when they believe they have a superior skin colour.
I recognize that we can have unconscious prejudices, and these cause real pain to the victims. But one of my desires in posting this thread is finding a way to distinguish between narrow-minded people from those whose hearts are in the right place - it's just that they haven't had anyone show them that it is possible to live a fulfilling life without the function of hearing.