Explorations and experiments in visual representations - multimodality, sensory ethnography, reflexivity, autoethnographic vignettes, ethnographic photography and ba...
Monday, July 2, 2012
Shuwa Dandelion Event in Osaka with Ezoe & Yonaiyama
Recently at the newly established JSL school in Osaka, Dandelion, two deaf "celebrities" discussed sign language news and the current state of deaf people in the realms of politics, culture, education, interpretation and other issues in Japanese society.
The first celebrity speaker was Satoshi Ezoe, founder of the Deaf News Network (DNN). He discussed the founding and evolution of this special internet news service for deaf people in Japan. It all began with the lack of news and information available for deaf people during the wake of 3/11 disasters. Ezoe began broadcasting on March 14, 2011 and supplied much needed news to deaf people in Japanese Sign Language. Since then, deaf people have requested more varied news broadcasts and so the DNN has been expanding. DNN uses relatively simple technology. There is no fancy studio. Rather Ezoe and other newscasters use the camera in their personal computer to make videos and then make them available through YouTube. This seems to be a popular service for deaf people throughout Japan and in other parts of the world.
The second celebrity speaker was Akihiro Yonaiyama, long time actor, writer, producer, teacher... He is probably the most well known Japanese deaf person in and out of Japan. His main lecture was a criticism of the recent policies of the Japanese Federation of the Deaf (JFD). The JFD views sign language as a means of communication rather than a boda fide language and does not support the idea of Deaf culture. This runs counter to most major national deaf organizations throughout the world and to proponents of Deaf culture (and/or Deaf/Japanese bilingualism) within Japan. While I won't go into specifics here, Yonaiyama's energetic lecture certainly illustrates the politics is alive and well in the Japanese deaf world; the Japanese deaf are not a unified group which adds to the challenges they face in an overwhelmingly hearing hegemonic society.
The event ended with a social gathering at a near-by izakaya where several ideas about improving the situation of the deaf were shared over food and drink. This was another great example of deaf people traveling throughout Japan to share information and exchange ideas.
Link to photos from the event: https://picasaweb.google.com/visual.gonthros/ShuwaDandelion?authuser=0&feat=directlink
Link to Deaf Network News (in Japanese and JSL; a simple English description is also available): http://www.dnn-japan.com/
Link to Dandelion Blog (in Japanese and JSL): http://blogs.yahoo.co.jp/hi_ka_ju_ta
Great blog! I've been searching for an anthropology blog on Japan for some time and I'm glad I found this! (I have a BA in Anthropology from KU.)
ReplyDeleteI just started a blog on the yakuza. http://yakuzawatch.blogspot.com/. Would you like to share links?