Managing Their Own Affairs explores how Deaf organizations and
institutions were forged in Australia during the early 20th century.
During this period, deaf people challenged the authority of the
dominant welfare organizations, or Deaf Societies, which were largely
controlled by hearing people and run as charitable institutions. Breda
Carty comprehensively documents the growth of the Australian Deaf
community and Australian Deaf organizations for the first time. She
focuses on both the political developments of the early 20th century
and on the nature of the relationships between deaf and hearing
people. During this time, deaf
Australians aspired to manage their own affairs. They enjoyed some
success by establishing “breakaways” from the Deaf Societies, and
they also established an independent national organization, which was
contested and ultimately suppressed by the Deaf Societies. These
developments were influenced by wider social movements in Australian
society, such as the mobilization of minority groups in their push for
autonomy and equal rights. Although most of the breakaway Deaf
organizations did not survive beyond the 1930s, they significantly
affected the power structures and relationships between deaf and
hearing people in Australia. The Australian Deaf community’s
attempts to organize independently during these years have been
largely erased from collective memory, making Carty’s examination a
particularly important and necessary addition to the historical
literature.
Les mer
The Australian Deaf Community in the 1920s and 1930s
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781944838119
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Vendor
Gallaudet University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter