Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults

There is a dearth of literature about the lived experiences of hearing children of Deaf adults (CODAs) within the South African context that this study attempts to address. Most African publications examining issues of Deafness focus on the experience of Deaf people themselves. Not much attention is...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harrison, Jane
Other Authors: Watermeyer, Brian
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Division of Disability Studies 2019
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613225399353344
access_status_str Open Access
author Harrison, Jane
author2 Watermeyer, Brian
author_browse Harrison, Jane
Watermeyer, Brian
author_facet Watermeyer, Brian
Harrison, Jane
author_sort Harrison, Jane
collection Thesis
description There is a dearth of literature about the lived experiences of hearing children of Deaf adults (CODAs) within the South African context that this study attempts to address. Most African publications examining issues of Deafness focus on the experience of Deaf people themselves. Not much attention is given to the fact that children of Deaf adults may have their own experiences which are tied to the Deafness of their parents. Through a critical examination of my own experiences as a CODA, I sought to answer the following question: In which ways has my position in my family as a CODA, my identification as a Coloured person, my gender, and the context of Apartheid South Africa influenced my sense of self? Aim: The aim of the study is to provide the reader with rich, first-person information regarding the social, political and cultural circumstances of my formative years, in the context of being female, coloured, and having parents who are Deaf, against the backdrop of the South Africa of the 1980s. I draw attention to the intersections within my life as a bicultural, Coloured female in South Africa. Using a qualitative research method, auto-ethnography (specifically an evocative ethnographic method) to generate and analyse data, I endeavour to connect my story to wider cultural, political and social processes. The analysis was informed by literature from d/Deaf studies and a conceptual framework that included models of disability, the notion of intersectionality, and theoretical ideas concerning identity formation. Objectives: I explore: i) the key elements of context that combined to shape my experience of being raised as a CODA; ii) my experiences of identity formation; iii) the ways in which the intersection of various social life attributes that include race, gender, bicultural identity, and disability have intersected to frame my lifeworld as a CODA. Methodology: I used the auto-ethnographic approach and specifically, evocative autoethnography. I drew upon the thematic analysis method to analyse the data. Findings: The auto-ethnographic material depicts my lived experience as a CODA. A key finding relates to bicultural identity formation in a context of South Africa that has been profoundly shaped by Apartheid. While negotiating a terrain that is characterised by rampant racial discrimination and the difficulties that surround an identity that is both of the Deaf and hearing worlds, my story shows up a number of active responses to my life-world, rather than a passive acceptance and internalisation of its contradictions. Conclusion: This study supports the use of auto-ethnography as a way of exploring the experience of identity formation in CODAs in a context where the ambiguities of life as a CODA are complicated by identity intersections with race, gender and culture.
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29176
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:45.765Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2019
publishDateRange 2019
publishDateSort 2019
publisher Division of Disability Studies
publisherStr Division of Disability Studies
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/29176 Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults Harrison, Jane Watermeyer, Brian Disability Studies Deafness There is a dearth of literature about the lived experiences of hearing children of Deaf adults (CODAs) within the South African context that this study attempts to address. Most African publications examining issues of Deafness focus on the experience of Deaf people themselves. Not much attention is given to the fact that children of Deaf adults may have their own experiences which are tied to the Deafness of their parents. Through a critical examination of my own experiences as a CODA, I sought to answer the following question: In which ways has my position in my family as a CODA, my identification as a Coloured person, my gender, and the context of Apartheid South Africa influenced my sense of self? Aim: The aim of the study is to provide the reader with rich, first-person information regarding the social, political and cultural circumstances of my formative years, in the context of being female, coloured, and having parents who are Deaf, against the backdrop of the South Africa of the 1980s. I draw attention to the intersections within my life as a bicultural, Coloured female in South Africa. Using a qualitative research method, auto-ethnography (specifically an evocative ethnographic method) to generate and analyse data, I endeavour to connect my story to wider cultural, political and social processes. The analysis was informed by literature from d/Deaf studies and a conceptual framework that included models of disability, the notion of intersectionality, and theoretical ideas concerning identity formation. Objectives: I explore: i) the key elements of context that combined to shape my experience of being raised as a CODA; ii) my experiences of identity formation; iii) the ways in which the intersection of various social life attributes that include race, gender, bicultural identity, and disability have intersected to frame my lifeworld as a CODA. Methodology: I used the auto-ethnographic approach and specifically, evocative autoethnography. I drew upon the thematic analysis method to analyse the data. Findings: The auto-ethnographic material depicts my lived experience as a CODA. A key finding relates to bicultural identity formation in a context of South Africa that has been profoundly shaped by Apartheid. While negotiating a terrain that is characterised by rampant racial discrimination and the difficulties that surround an identity that is both of the Deaf and hearing worlds, my story shows up a number of active responses to my life-world, rather than a passive acceptance and internalisation of its contradictions. Conclusion: This study supports the use of auto-ethnography as a way of exploring the experience of identity formation in CODAs in a context where the ambiguities of life as a CODA are complicated by identity intersections with race, gender and culture. 2019-01-29T08:47:07Z 2019-01-29T08:47:07Z 2018 Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29176 eng application/pdf Division of Disability Studies Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Disability Studies
Deafness
Harrison, Jane
Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
title_full Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
title_fullStr Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
title_full_unstemmed Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
title_short Voices through my hands: An auto-ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a South African child of Deaf adults
title_sort voices through my hands an auto ethnographic study of the lived experiences of a south african child of deaf adults
topic Disability Studies
Deafness
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/29176
work_keys_str_mv AT harrisonjane voicesthroughmyhandsanautoethnographicstudyofthelivedexperiencesofasouthafricanchildofdeafadults