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14 votes
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Why Koko the gorilla couldn't talk
13 votes -
The history of (American) Sign Language
4 votes -
Anyone willing to teach me ASL?
I'm a sucker for languages and lately I've been wanting to learn a sign language (not specificallly ASL as I put in the title, I'm open to learning any local flavour). And well, with COVID and...
I'm a sucker for languages and lately I've been wanting to learn a sign language (not specificallly ASL as I put in the title, I'm open to learning any local flavour).
And well, with COVID and everything, I figure this may be a good opportunity to do this with someone else and have someone to talk to. So, is there anyone on Tildes who would be willing to have regular informal video chats, where we talk and you try to teach me as we go? (And of course I can accommodate by text if needed)
No hard commitment, this can just be something we try once and if it's boring for either of us we don't have to continue :) But I'm hoping it'll be fun enough to be a regular thing!
PS. I can teach you French in return if you are interested!
10 votes -
The forgotten number system of the Cistercians
9 votes -
How sign language innovators are bringing music to the deaf
10 votes -
How British Sign Language developed its own dialects
4 votes -
When a Newton family welcomed a baby who is deaf, twenty neighbors learned sign language
10 votes -
How deaf children in Nicaragua created a new language
8 votes -
A silent leap in Broadway (and theatre)
Every now and then we get a change in a traditional medium that has the potential to completely change the medium itself. In TV, we went from black and white to colour to 3D, and now to VR. In...
Every now and then we get a change in a traditional medium that has the potential to completely change the medium itself. In TV, we went from black and white to colour to 3D, and now to VR. In theatre, we've been seeing more use of screens, and other technologies.
In the last few years, Broadway saw two amazing game-changers - Hamilton, and Deaf West's revival of Spring Awakening. Hamilton, honestly needs its own post.
Deaf West, as their name suggests, casts deaf actors with other actors supplying their voices. American Sign Language is incorporated into the dialogue, songs and choreography. It adds a whole new dimension to existing works and allows the theatre medium to be enjoyed by a more inclusive audience.
I really hope to see productions like this more.
Thoughts? Anything new or old brought to theatre that you love? Any changes you'll like to see?
3 votes -
Minor league baseball team Myrtle Beach Pelicans to host Deaf Awareness Night on August 19
3 votes -
Koko, the beloved gorilla that learned to communicate using sign language, has died
15 votes