Black ASL: Racism and Audism as the Origins of Variation [vídeo]
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The Linguistic Society of America has recognized its role in reproducing racism in the field of linguistics and developed several aims to address this deep-rooted problem: “to address inequality in linguistics, to inform research on language and race and its intersections, to help empower and welcome people from various racial backgrounds into linguistics, and to broaden the conversation on race so that future work can best promote diversity and inclusion” (LSA 2019 statement). It is also important to recognize that racism is interconnected with the different systems of oppression including but not limited to sexism, classism, and ableism. The case of Black American Sign Language, Black ASL for short, will be used to discuss how the intersection of racism and audism (a form of ableism based on hearing ability) defines the U.S. educational, political, and cultural pressures on the formation and maintenance of Black ASL as a language variety from 1860s to present and limits the availability of resources to study the structural and socio-cultural contexts of Black ASL.