BRANSON, Jan and MILLER, Don (2002). Damned for their Difference. The Cultural Construction of Deaf People as Disabled. Washington DC: Gallaudet University Press.
In Damned for Their Difference, Jan Branson and Don Miller have written an important and provocative book that contributes to the growing debate in disability history about the nature of difference and how it is culturally defined. (1) Their subject is the "cultural construction of deaf people as disabled" in Britain from the seventeenth-century to the present and to a lesser extent in Australia for the modern period. Branson and Miller, who are both sociologists, contend that earlier writers have seriously misrepresented the history of deaf people in Britain; therefore they view themselves as revisionist researchers. (p. xii) In their study, the authors present a wide-range of historical and cultural evidence from the age of Scientific Revolution to the age of the cochlear implant in an effort to explain why deaf people have been marginalized and treated as disabled.
(Journal article by Anne T. Quartararo; Journal of Social History, Vol. 38, 2004)
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