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Biographical note: David Brehme, M.Sc., ist Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter am Institut für Rehabilitationswissenschaften, HU-Berlin. Er arbeitet zu Normalitätskonstruktionen, Disability Studies (in Education), Inklusive Bildung, Ethnografie. Petra Fuchs, Prof. Dr., ist Professorin für Heilpädagogik/Inclusion Studies an der Hochschule Zittau/Görlitz. Arbeitsschwerpunkte: medizinhistorische Forschung zu NS-Zwangssterilisation und »Euthanasie«, Biographieforschung, Disability History. Swantje Köbsell, Prof. Dr., ist Professorin für Disability Studies an der Alice Salomon Hochschule in Berlin. Arbeitsschwerpunkte: Disability Studies/Disability Studies in Education, intersektionale Aspekte von Behinderung. Carla Wesselmann, Prof. Dr., ist Professorin für Soziale Arbeit und Wissenschaften zu Behinderung an der HS Emden-Leer. Sie arbeitet zu Disability Studies und Menschenrechte. Long description: 15 Jahre nach der Sommeruniversität in Bremen hat im Oktober 2018 eine Tagung in Berlin über 200 in den Disability Studies Aktive, Wissenschaftler*innen und Aktivist*innen, aus dem deutschen Sprachraum zusammengeführt. Aus diesem Zusammentreffen sind die in diesem Band versammelten Beiträge entstanden, die den aktuellen Stand der wissenschaftlichen Debatte in diesem jungen, dynamischen Wissenschaftsfeld abbilden. Sie verdeutlichen, in welch innovativer Weise die Disability Studies durch ihre normalitätskritische und intersektionale Herangehensweise zur Dekonstruktion von Behinderung beitragen und damit einen zentralen Beitrag zu einem neuen Verständnis von Behinderung erbringen, das für gelingende Inklusion in allen gesellschaftlichen Bereichen unerlässlich ist. Das E-Book ist barrierefrei.
Behinderung --- Inklusion --- Intersektionalität --- Deaf Studies --- Behindertenbewegung --- Rehabilitationswissenschaften --- Normalitätskritik
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This book focuses on how sign language ideologies influence, manifest in, and are challenged by communicative practices. Sign languages are minority languages using the visual-gestural and tactile modalities, whose affordances are very different from those of spoken languages using the auditory-oral modality.
Sign language. --- Applied Linguistics. --- Deaf Studies. --- Intercultural Studies. --- Sign Language Studies. --- Sociolinguistics. --- Deaf --- Gesture language --- Language and languages --- Gesture --- Signs and symbols --- Sign language
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Typological studies require a broad range of linguistic data from a variety of countries, especially developing nations whose languages are under-researched. This is especially challenging for investigations of sign languages, because there are no existing corpora for most of them, and some are completely undocumented. To examine three cross-linguistically fruitful semantic fields in sign languages from a typological perspective for the first time, a detailed questionnaire was generated and distributed worldwide through emails, mailing lists, websites and the newsletter of the World Federation of the Deaf (WFD). This resulted in robust data on kinship, colour and number in 32 sign languages across the globe, 10 of which are revealed in depth within this volume. These comprise languages from Europe, the Americas and the Asia-Pacific region, including Indonesian sign language varieties, which are rarely studied. Like other volumes in this series, this book will be illuminative for typologists, students of linguistics and deaf studies, lecturers, researchers, interpreters, and sign language users who travel internationally.
Sign language --- Typology (Linguistics) --- Grammar, Comparative and general --- Language and languages --- Linguistic typology --- Deaf --- Gesture language --- Semantics. --- Typology --- Linguistics --- Linguistic universals --- Gesture --- Signs and symbols --- Classification --- Typology (Linguistics). --- Deaf Studies. --- Linguistics. --- Sign Language. --- Typology.
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What is life? What is water? What is sound? In Sounding the Limits of Life, anthropologist Stefan Helmreich investigates how contemporary scientists-biologists, oceanographers, and audio engineers-are redefining these crucial concepts. Life, water, and sound are phenomena at once empirical and abstract, material and formal, scientific and social. In the age of synthetic biology, rising sea levels, and new technologies of listening, these phenomena stretch toward their conceptual snapping points, breaching the boundaries between the natural, cultural, and virtual.Through examinations of the computational life sciences, marine biology, astrobiology, acoustics, and more, Helmreich follows scientists to the limits of these categories. Along the way, he offers critical accounts of such other-than-human entities as digital life forms, microbes, coral reefs, whales, seawater, extraterrestrials, tsunamis, seashells, and bionic cochlea. He develops a new notion of "sounding"-as investigating, fathoming, listening-to describe the form of inquiry appropriate for tracking meanings and practices of the biological, aquatic, and sonic in a time of global change and climate crisis.Sounding the Limits of Life shows that life, water, and sound no longer mean what they once did, and that what count as their essential natures are under dynamic revision.
Physical anthropology. --- Human biology. --- Life sciences. --- Ethnology. --- Cultural anthropology --- Ethnography --- Races of man --- Social anthropology --- Anthropology --- Human beings --- Biosciences --- Sciences, Life --- Science --- Biology --- Physical anthropology --- Biological anthropology --- Somatology --- Human biology --- Life sciences --- Ethnology --- 781.1 --- 7.01 --- Sound studies --- Antropologie --- Geluidskunst --- Kunst ; theorie, filosofie, --- Artificial Intelligence. --- Artificial Life. --- Century's End. --- Charles Sanders Peirce. --- Cold War. --- DNA. --- Deaf studies. --- Donna Haraway. --- Earth. --- Florian Hecker. --- Google Earth. --- Google Ocean. --- Hillel Schwartz. --- India. --- Indian Ocean tsunami. --- Peter Galison. --- Raymond Williams. --- Rudolph Bodmer. --- Satish Singh. --- The Culture of the Copy. --- abductive reasoning. --- analog whale. --- anthropology. --- aquatic. --- artificial life form. --- astrobiology. --- auditory chimeras. --- auditory chimerism. --- biological. --- biology. --- chimeric composition. --- chimeric listening. --- cognition. --- computational life sciences. --- computer simulations. --- coral reef science. --- coral reefs. --- culture. --- cyborg sound. --- deaf futurists. --- deafness. --- deductive reasoning. --- digital life forms. --- digital media. --- digital whale. --- ethno-conchology. --- experimental music. --- extraterrestrial intelligence. --- extraterrestrial life. --- feminist science studies. --- fiberglass whale. --- genealogies. --- geological time. --- global ocean. --- global warming. --- globalization. --- hearing. --- human microbiome. --- icons. --- indexes. --- inductive reasoning. --- knowledge. --- life form. --- life. --- limit biologies. --- listening. --- marine biology. --- marine microbiology. --- microbes. --- microbial life. --- migration. --- modernism. --- modernity. --- natural philosophers. --- nature. --- ocean time. --- ocean. --- oceanization. --- oceanographic conference. --- popular science. --- race. --- scientific research. --- scientists. --- sea lions. --- seashell sound. --- seashells. --- seawater. --- sex. --- signification. --- silence. --- simulated whale. --- social theory. --- sonic. --- sound recordings. --- sound studies. --- sound. --- species. --- speech. --- symbols. --- theory machine. --- theory. --- time. --- underwater archaeology. --- underwater music. --- water. --- whale fall. --- whales.
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