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Jaipreet Virdi

    Dr. Jaipreet Virdi ist eine Historikerin, deren Forschung sich darauf konzentriert, wie Medizin und Technologie die gelebten Erfahrungen von Menschen mit Behinderungen beeinflussen. Sie befasst sich mit Diagnosetechnologien, Audiometrie, Hörgeräten und der Medizinisierung von Gehörlosigkeit. Ihre Arbeit nutzt sie, um das Bewusstsein für medizinische Ungleichheiten, soziale Ungerechtigkeit und die Rechte von Menschen mit Behinderungen zu schärfen. Ihr Schreiben erweitert den Unterricht in einen öffentlicheren und zugänglicheren Bereich, wo sie einzigartige Bilder und Geschichten aus der Medizingeschichte teilt.

    Hearing Happiness
    Hearing Happiness - Deafness Cures in History
    • "In the mid-nineteenth century, deaf people were expected to overcome their hearing defects, to learn to mask their deafness through speech or speechreading, undergo various medical therapeutics, or make use of hearing aids. A variety of methods were used from burning caustics, blistering, hammering, and bloodletting to mercury, urine, oil of earthworm, and fat of eels. Ear trumpets and other prosthetics provided glimmers of hope, though in many instances, they were useless for pre-lingually deaf persons. But any cure was better than no cure. The message was so powerful that even as safer surgical procedures and newer technologies were devised, the message remained steadfast, inviting unscrupulous quacks to profit by promising hope. Hearing Happiness explores how, between the 1860s and 1960s, as American culture was obsessed with establishing conformity, the problem of deafness was perceived as nothing more than a problem of better living. The author's personal journey, narrated along the way, makes vivid this new and distinctive account of American deaf history, told through the lens of medical and technological 'cures' before modern hearing aids and implants"-- Provided by publisher

      Hearing Happiness - Deafness Cures in History
    • "In the mid-nineteenth century, deaf people were expected to overcome their hearing defects, to learn to mask their deafness through speech or speechreading, undergo various medical therapeutics, or make use of hearing aids. A variety of methods were used from burning caustics, blistering, hammering, and bloodletting to mercury, urine, oil of earthworm, and fat of eels. Ear trumpets and other prosthetics provided glimmers of hope, though in many instances, they were useless for pre-lingually deaf persons. But any cure was better than no cure. The message was so powerful that even as safer surgical procedures and newer technologies were devised, the message remained steadfast, inviting unscrupulous quacks to profit by promising hope. Hearing Happiness explores how, between the 1860s and 1960s, as American culture was obsessed with establishing conformity, the problem of deafness was perceived as nothing more than a problem of better living. The author's personal journey, narrated along the way, makes vivid this new and distinctive account of American deaf history, told through the lens of medical and technological 'cures' before modern hearing aids and implants"-- Provided by publisher

      Hearing Happiness