My friend George sent me this amazing link to a youtube video. It's a Pantene commercial from Thailand featuring a deaf violinist.
One of the best ads that I've ever seen. And their signing isn't that bad either!
My friend George sent me this amazing link to a youtube video. It's a Pantene commercial from Thailand featuring a deaf violinist.
One of the best ads that I've ever seen. And their signing isn't that bad either!
I don't know if I ever linked to Prof. Steven Fedorowicz's Visual Anthropology of Japan Blog, but just in case I haven't:
http://visualanthropologyofjapan.blogspot.com/
Steven has a very nice section on the Ethics of Visual Anthropology in Japan -- especially intended for his students.
As Borat would say, "Verrrryy niiiice!"
From the mailbag:
Hello! My name is Elle Langevin, and I run a summer camp program for Deaf and HoH children in NH, at Windsor Mountain International Summer Camp. This year marks the 10th year that we will be offering this program, and we have made some significant changes, the most exciting being that we are now offering a 5 week intensive immersion program for beginning ASL interpreters. I am hoping that through your organization we can get the word out about this opportunity, possibly through your newsletter, and reach the students that would really benefit from this experience.
Anthrogeek
Jason Romero let me know of the publication of the new edition of a classic -- Eyes of Desire 2: A Deaf GLBT Reader.
This first edition of this book is one of my favorites to use in deaf studies and lgbt studies classes, so I'm glad there's an updated version. The new table of contents looks very interesting: “Black Deaf Lesbian Pagan Tomfemme,” “Why I Wear Leather,” “Evergreen in Ethiopia,” “A Minority of One,” “Hauntings,” “Growing Up Deaf and Gay in 1960s Britain,” “If I Met a Deaf Asexual,” “A Leather Rose,” “Couple #189,” “My First Deaf Guy,” “Darkness: Coming of Age in India,” “You Sign Like a Girl,” “I am a Deaf Hindu Lesbian,” and “A Journey in Iran.”
Definitely a must-buy. Amazon doesn't have it so you need to order it through the publisher: http://www.handtype.com/books/eod2/eod2.html ($20 + $3 shipping).
I was asked the other day by a graduate student about how to get published by a university press. I thought the easiest thing to do was to post the letter that I wrote to Cornell University Press back in 2003 proposing the book that eventually became Deaf in Japan: Signing and the Politics of Identity.