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The
term hearing or hearing person, from the perspective of mainstream
English-language culture, refers to someone whose sense of hearing is at the
medical norm. From this point of view, someone who is not fully hearing has a hearing impairment or is
said to be hard of hearing or deaf. The continuum of hearing ability tends to be
broken down into fine gradations. Moving down the scale and further away from
normal, people are classed as hearing, then slightly hard of hearing, moderately
hard of hearing, severely hard of hearing, and finally deaf (severely deaf or
profoundly deaf for the worst cases). However,
when examined in the context of Deaf culture, the term “hearing” often does not hold the
same meaning as when one thinks simply of a person's ability to hear sounds. In
deaf culture, “hearing”, being the opposite of “deaf” (which is used
inclusively — without the many gradations common to mainstream culture), is
often used as a way of differentiating those who do not view the deaf community
as a
language minority, do not embrace deaf values, history,
language, mores, and sense of personal dignity as the deaf do themselves. Among
language minorities in the United States – for example, groups such as
Mexicans, Koreans, Italians, Chinese, or deaf users of sign language – the
minority language group itself has a “we” or “insider” view of their
cultural group as well as a “they” or “outsider” view of those who do
not share the values of the group. So, in addition to using “hearing” to
identify a person who can detect sounds, deaf culture uses this term as a we
and they distinction to show a difference in attitude between people who
embrace the view of deaf people who use sign language as a language minority,
and those who view deafness strictly from its pathological context. This being the case, a single person could be described as hearing by one
person and deaf by another because the first person was thinking simply about
the subjects sensitivity to sound whereas the other person was thinking,
partially about the persons ability to rely on residual hearing, but also about
their personal views, their identity, or perhaps their ignorance of cultural
norms.
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