It does if you have the right teachers, a complete curriculum, and the right attitude for learning. If you don't incorporate the culture into language learning you'll never be truly fluent, grade "A" or not.
Well, I certainly had the right attitude for learning, but I couldn't very well learn what I wasn't taught. I was as "fluent" as I needed to be to get an "A" and to meet a requirement to get into college. I had no reason to learn more of the Spanish culture and no real opportunity, because I grew up in poor, small-town northern New England where there aren't many people who are native Spanish speakers. It was either take the Spanish classes that my school offered or not get into the college I wanted to. I also had no idea that I wasn't learning all there was to know; you don't know what you don't know, you know?
No, but culture without a language will die out. Without a way of sharing the culture and passing it down thru language, it will cease to exist.
I attended a Native American powwow a couple of years ago. Most of the people there (to my knowledge and hearing, anyway) weren't fluent in any Native American language, but they were still practicing their customs and traditions and passing them down to their children and grand children. Their cultures had changed but certainly hadn't ceased to exist. Even though their cultures' languages and lands had been taken away from them, they found a way to bring parts of their culture back. Is it the same as it was before? Certainly not. And I in no way excuse what happened to Native peoples historically. But losing a language doesn't by itself mean a culture has to completely die out.
Who said anything about "suddenly" knowing a culture? It's a process, never ending. If she didn't get instruction on the cultures of the languages she studied (formal or informal), then her language learning was incomplete. Learning a new language and culture isn't a subtraction process--it's an addition. That is, when she learned English she didn't unlearn Chinese.
Wrong. You can't teach yourself something that you don't know.
That's false. People can teach themselves lots of things. You don't have to learn from someone else in person to learn something new. People learn all the time by reading books or or by self-discovery or observing things happening around them. It may not be the best way or the most complete way to learn, but it is possible. Even if when taught something by another person, it's possible and even encouraged that people try to surpass their teacher in what they know. If people never learn more than they're taught by others, society never progresses.
If you aren't aware of the culture, then you can't teach it to yourself.
I completely agree. However, I can teach myself a language. I don't need to know American or British or Australian culture to learn how to string English words together correctly. Is that the same as learning the culture? No, and that's my point.
ASL is the defining element of the Deaf culture. Without ASL, you would just have a bunch of people who can't hear ("deaf").
Ok, but the reason that's confusing to me is it makes it seem like ASL is all there is to Deaf culture. Without ASL, Deaf culture collapses and can't survive. I don't actually believe this, but that makes it seem like there's not much of substance to Deaf culture if it can't exist without ASL. It's been said by some Deaf people on this board that cochlear implants are a threat to Deaf culture, but if learning a new culture is addition and not subtraction, then why do so many Deaf people feel threatened by cochlear implants? Why do some Deaf people pressure other Deaf people to not use their cochlear implants? Why do some Deaf people believe they'd lose their identity and culture if they were able to hear? Wouldn't that be gaining a new culture on top of their Deaf culture? I'm not talking about depriving deaf people from experiencing Deaf culture or implanting children, but about grown people making a choice to experience something new to add to what they already have. I'm not saying every Deaf adult (or child) should get a cochlear implant, by the way, just that I don't understand some Deaf people's attitudes towards others who make that choice. If it's because they don't like certain cochlear companies' practices or history or the use of cochlear implants on children, then I hope those people don't use or buy any other products made by companies who do - or have done - things they disagree with.
I don't think you're open to "getting" it.
If I wasn't open/interested, I wouldn't be here discussing it. I'd have given up and gone away. My inability to understand something doesn't mean I'm not trying to.
For one thing, your comparisons aren't equivalent. (BTW, people don't "speak" ASL, they sign it.) Choosing a language just for chatting with friends is hardly equivalent to daily using a language as your primary means of expression, and only switching languages out of forced necessity.
I fully realize that my comparisons aren't equivalent, but I can't think of any other examples that are and that's the closest I could come to based on my personal experiences.
Yourself included, I hope.
Again, I wouldn't be here if I didn't want to learn. Learning is a process.
if language is not crucial to culture, why do those in charge of people take control of their subjects' languages? In America, the well-known historical reference is the Native groups having their indigenous languages forbidden. Why? Because it was a major step in removing their power and culture.
In America, we also have a historical reference, maybe not as well known to the general hearing public. It occurred after the Milan Conference, which tried to force the termination of use of ASL in America. Why? Because the paternalistic powers in charge knew that they couldn't fully take charge until they also controlled the language.
No, I don't think that is known to the general hearing public. And while history is important and certainly should be learned from, it's also not usually productive to keep dragging up past injustices in a way that perpetuates bad feelings and prevents healing. For example, even though I'm HOH I'm also hearing, so while I can understand why Deaf people who have experienced discrimination and abuse from hearing people in the past may feel deep mistrust or even hatred towards the people who treated them badly, I as a hearing person was not responsible for that past mistreatment. When I'm lumped together with all "hearies" and told that I'm audist because I prefer being able to hear, that's not helpful at all in assisting me to be more open to understanding the Deaf point of view.
I'm here because I'm HOH with progressive loss and I'm seeking fellowship and helpful advice from others going through what I am. That's all. I didn't come here to become a card-carrying member of the Deaf community. That's not a requirement of membership to this site, after all. I was curious about Deaf culture, but as soon as I found out that ASL was a requirement, then that option was out for me. Many Deaf people here repeatedly remind the hearing/HOH that they don't want to become hearing; well, not all deaf people are interested in becoming Deaf, either, especially when we feel attacked and unwelcome. I've never told any Deaf person here that I think they should get a cochlear implant or they're wrong for not wanting to hear. If I don't understand the Deaf point of view, well, there's a good reason for that: I grew up hearing and have never met anyone who's Deaf! Until I began losing hearing in my "good" ear, I never gave much thought to the fact that I might one day be completely deaf, or how I might deal with that. Not many hearing people ever think of such things until they're actually faced with them.
Your analogy of friends choosing to speak Spanish amongst themselves falls flat. Now, suppose instead that the government forced you to speak Spanish only, and every time you used English you'd be slapped hard across the face.
Well, I unfortunately remember corporal punishment in school for other things, so I imagine that would be very traumatic and damaging, both for the person being slapped and for the other children who had to witness it. But again, I've never hit a Deaf person for using ASL or told them they shouldn't use it, and this isn't a thread about forcing Deaf people to not use ASL. Because some Deaf people were historically prevented from using ASL, I'm sure that has a lot to do with why some Deaf people feel so threatened by or look down on other Deaf/deaf people who choose to get cochlear implants for themselves or their children.
Anyway, in an attempt to bring the conversation back to the topic of the thread, this is a thread about Walk4Hearing, which from what I've read is put on by a group started by someone who was late deafened and who had a close relationship with Gallaudet University. I don't belong to Walk4Hearing, but it seems like it's mainly for people who are late deafened/HOH and who want assistance being able to hear better and communicate with hearing people. It's not a group that, as far as I can tell, discriminates against Deaf people; it's just simply not geared FOR Deaf people. There are other groups for Deaf people, so I personally think it's nice that HOH folks like me have a group that provides help with services that we might be interested in, especially since there are lots of HOH people who may need help with buying hearing aids or getting other services that insurance doesn't cover.
I don't think it's necessary for all deaf/HOH groups/organizations to provide ALL services to ALL people, just as I don't think it's necessary for all stores to sell everything. Since people who are Deaf, deaf, and HOH each seem to have different needs/interests, having some organizations that provide specialized services for each group may not be such a bad thing.
I'm fully aware that there are many things about Deaf culture that I don't understand and probably never will, not just because I don't know ASL but because I don't know any Deaf people. Even if I wanted to learn ASL, from a practical standpoint it doesn't make much sense for me. I don't say that to put down ASL or Deaf culture; I'm just being realistic. That's one reason why it's disappointing for me to discover that Deaf culture and ASL are so closely intertwined. Because I came from one big happy family of variously-HOH people, it was quite jarring to discover that to Deaf people, being deaf/HOH isn't "enough." Again, I'm not saying that to judge or criticize. I feel like I'm beginning to understand now, even when I seem like I'm not. But because I feel like learning ASL isn't a practical option for me, I also feel like I will never understand, so I also feel frustrated with my inability, if that makes sense.
I'm sure from a Deaf perspective I say a lot of stupid or ignorant things (or both!), but please understand that even though I've been HOH all my life and grew up around many HOH people, until I came to this board I never had any contact with the Deaf community at all. I thought of ASL as just another language, and had no real idea about Deaf culture. If I as a HOH person, surrounded by so many other HOH relatives, had such limited knowledge or understanding, I can only imagine how little the general hearing population knows about Deaf people or culture.