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Glossary

Terms used in accessibility research and practice. Each entry has a definition, common aliases, and category tags.

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Deaf Community(also: Deaf World, Signing Community)
A cultural and linguistic community of people who are Deaf or hard of hearing and who share a common language (typically a sign language), cultural values, traditions, and social norms. The Deaf community is distinguished from the broader population of people with hearing loss…
Deaf Culture(also: Deaf Community Culture)
The shared cultural identity, values, social norms, language, art, literature, and history of Deaf people who communicate primarily through sign language. Deaf culture (with a capital "D") views deafness not as a disability or medical condition to be fixed, but as a cultural and…
Disability Aesthetics
A discourse related to reclaiming the visibility of disability in mainstream art, particularly visual and performance arts, through the depiction of disabled bodies as both beautiful and inspiring. Unlike disability art, disability aesthetics does not necessarily carry a social…
Disability Art(also: Disability Arts)
Artistic work created by disabled artists that is specifically informed by their experience of disability, often rooted in the social dynamics of identity, disability culture, and the struggle for disability justice and equality. Disability art is distinct from art therapy…
Disability Culture(also: Crip Culture)
Disability culture encompasses the shared experiences, values, art, language, humor, and traditions that have developed among people with disabilities as a distinct social group. It includes disability art, literature, music, film, and performance, as well as communal practices…
Disability Pride(also: Disability Identity Pride)
The acknowledgment and embracing of disability as a valued part of personal identity rather than something to hide, overcome, or be ashamed of. Disability Pride is rooted in the social model of disability, which locates barriers in society rather than in individuals. In…
Disability Representation(also: Disability Portrayal, Disability Media Representation)
How disabled people and disability are depicted, described, and constructed in media, marketing, technology, research, and public discourse. Disability representation encompasses visual imagery, language choices, narrative framing, and the selection of whose voices and…
Disabled Joy(also: Disability Joy, Crip Joy)
Disabled joy refers to the positive experiences, pleasures, and sources of happiness that arise from or are connected to living as a disabled person. This includes pride in disability identity, the richness of disability community and culture, the creativity born of adapting to…

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