{"version":"1.0","provider_name":"Rainbow Dash Network","provider_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/","type":"link","title":"Griffin (vcgriffin)'s status on Saturday, 23-May-15 23:33:17 UTC","author_name":"Griffin (vcgriffin)","author_url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/vcgriffin","url":"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/notice\/3930515","html":"@<span class=\"vcard\"><a href=\"http:\/\/rainbowdash.net\/user\/2706\" class=\"url\" title=\"The biggest loser on the beach\"><span class=\"fn nickname mention\">mushi<\/span><\/a><\/span> I Agree with what you said, and started reading this, &quot;2.1 Disabled People Patriarchy in the UK: The Language of Disability&quot; Clarke, Marsh 2002 (<a href=\"http:\/\/disability-studies.leeds.ac.uk\/files\/library\/Clark-Laurence-language.pdf\" title=\"http:\/\/disability-studies.leeds.ac.uk\/files\/library\/Clark-Laurence-language.pdf\" class=\"attachment\" id=\"attachment-823396\" rel=\"nofollow external\">http:\/\/disability-studies.leeds.ac.uk\/files\/library\/Clark-Laurence-language.pdf<\/a> )<br \/>But this is just what makes me afaid of asking others.......<br \/>&quot;The Deaf people\u2019s movement largely does not identify with the term<br \/>\u2018disabled people\u2019, instead adopting a cultural model and defining themselves as a<br \/>linguistic minority. Corker (2002) defines Deaf people as \u201cthat group of people with<br \/>hearing impairments who are excluded from the dominant areas of social and cultural<br \/>reproduction by the perpetuation of a phonocentric world-view.\u201d Deaf people too have<br \/>adopted a capital \u2018D\u2019 in order to politicise the word.&quot;"}