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Deaf Liberation Theology and the 40th Anniversary of the Claggett Statement

Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

From June 21-25, 1984, an ecumenical group of ten deaf and hearing women and men from North America gathered at the Claggett Center in Adamstown, Maryland over four days to dialogue and reflect on liberation theologies’ implications in the context of the struggles of deaf people. The document was promulgated in American Sign Language and written English, and inspired the founding of the group, “Christians for the Liberation of the Deaf Community” an ecumenical group that was active for more than a decade. This panel aims to spotlight this landmark, but often overlooked statement on its 40th anniversary, by reflecting on its past, present and future in intersectional ways with new scholarship on Deafhood, critical disability studies, Deaf Black Gain, LGBT studies, and interfaith studies.

Timeslot

Saturday, 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM

Audiovisual Requirements

Resources

LCD Projector and Screen
Podium microphone

Other

Mic should be able to work indepentently of the podium for the voice interprers to use from the front row.
Accessibility Requirements

Resources

Wheelchair accessible

Other

We presume we'd be in the RDS designated accessible room. We will require a team of ASL/English interpreters to voice multiple Deaf panelists

Comments

One of our panelists may have a preference for who voices them, we can work those details out when interpreting requests are made.} Please add our Respondent, Ella Mae Lentz, ASL Specialist & Deaf Culture Leader
Program Unit Options

Session Length

90 Minutes
Schedule Info

Saturday, 5:00 PM - 6:30 PM

Tags

#Deaf #Disability Studies #Liberation Theology #LGBTQ #Black Studies #Interfaith Studies

Session Identifier

A23-431