Analysis Of What's That Pig Outdoors

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What’s that Pig Outdoors? is a memoir whose name easily captures the attention of the potential reader. Moreover, the story of the title captures an important theme in the narrative, which is that being deaf can sometimes lead to humorous (and sometimes not so humorous) misunderstandings. Henry Kisor, the author of the memoir has been deaf since age three. Still, he grew up in the hearing world as a lip-reader, and does not separate himself from the hearing culture in the slightest. While his disability can lead to said misunderstandings, it hasn’t stopped Kisor from living his life the way he wants and feels is best for him. When it comes to disabilities of hearing, there is some significant division between people over whether hearing impairment and/or deafness constitutes a disability or a culture. Though Kisor has no residual hearing whatsoever, he did not lose his hearing until age three, and his parents raised him to be a lip reader rather than a user of sign language. He never associated with Deaf culture; he has always felt he belongs with those who can hear. He discusses this in his memoir several different times, saying, for example, at one point, “[TDDs] enabled …show more content…

From as far back as 500 B.C., people viewed those with hearing impairments as nonpersons and uneducable, and wrong perceptions and mistreatment continued for years (Avery). Today, mistreatment and overtly halting attitudes toward deaf people are mostly extinct, but stereotypes and discrimination still run rampant. Furthermore, not everyone was or is fortunate enough to have the support of possibilities Kisor did. A poem written by Stephen J. Bellitz in 1991 called “Thoughts of a Deaf Child” contrasts the first few chapters of What’s That Pig Outdoors?: My family knew that I was deaf When I was only three, and since then fifteen years ago Have never signed to me. I know when I 'm around the

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