Contextualizing Disability

Carolyn Sullivan
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

The interconnection of language and societal context is demonstrated through the Library of Congress Subject Headings surrounding disability. This study examines and compares how language encapsulates contemporary understandings of disability in the second edition (1919) and eighth edition (1975). Created and published during the so-called “Progressive Era,” the second edition emphasizes Victorian beliefs in the correspondence of morality with participation in the labour force and genetic fitness (i.e., conformity to physical and psychological norms). The language of this context further marginalized persons with disabilities. In contrast, the eighth edition marks the growing respect for and autonomy of people with disabilities, with language related to the civil rights movement, medical advances, and the replacement of ableist terms such as “Deaf and dumb” with neutral terms or self-definitions, such as “Deaf.” This evolution demonstrates the positive effects when we as librarians accept our social responsibility to eschew marginalizing language and instead use language that affirms minority identities.
中将残疾
语言和社会背景的相互联系通过国会图书馆关于残疾的主题标题得到了证明。本研究考察并比较了第二版(1919)和第八版(1975)中语言是如何概括当代对残疾的理解的。在所谓的“进步时代”创作和出版的第二版强调了维多利亚时代的信念,即道德与参与劳动力和遗传健康(即符合生理和心理规范)的对应关系。这方面的语言进一步使残疾人边缘化。相比之下,第八版标志着对残疾人的日益尊重和自主,使用了与民权运动、医学进步有关的语言,并用中性术语或自我定义(如“聋人”)取代了“聋哑人”等残疾主义术语。当我们作为图书馆员接受我们的社会责任,避免边缘化的语言,而是使用肯定少数民族身份的语言时,这种演变表明了积极的影响。
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