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El. knyga: Language Attitudes in the American Deaf Community

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Hill (American Sign Language licensuring, U. of North Carolina-Greensboro) explores the perceptions of linguistic features in different forms of signing--such as American Sign Language (ASL), contact signing, and Signed English--among social groups of the American Deaf community that vary by generation, age of acquisition, and race. His four years of research explored perceptions of signing types, effects of social information on the perceptions of signing types, evaluation of signing, and description of signing. He finds that ASL is much more accepted now than it was during the 1960's when William Stokoe first showed that it is a legitimate language, but many--especially older people--still believe that English is better. Annotation ©2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Hill’s new study shows various contradictions in the use of signed languages by exploring the linguistic and social factors that govern such stereotypical perceptions of social groups about signing differences.



Prerace ix
Acknowledgments xiii
Chapter 1 Language Attitudes
1(19)
Chapter 2 The American Deaf Community
20(22)
Chapter 3 Subjects and Signing Samples in the Study
42(10)
Chapter 4 Perceptions of Signing
52(11)
Chapter 5 Effect of Social Information on Perceptions
63(9)
Chapter 6 Evaluation of Signing Types
72(16)
Chapter 7 Description of Signing
88(59)
Chapter 8 Conclusion
147(18)
Appendix A Subjects' Responses on the Background Questionnaire 165(9)
Appendix B Language Judgment Scale 174(1)
Appendix C Language Feature Interview 175(3)
References 178(9)
Index 187
Joseph Christopher Hill is assistant professor and coordinator of the ASL Teacher Licensure Program at the University of North Carolina at Greenaboro. He is coauthor of The Hidden Treasure of Black ASL: Its History and Structure, also published by Gallaudet University Press.