Sound and Fury
Militant organizations of all types frequent the
political scene, generally engendering much debate on university campuses and
the talk radio airwaves, but how many know about militant deaf people?
Apparently there are quite a lot of them, and they seem to dislike the idea
that technology is rapidly progressing to a point where deafness can be cured, thereby
driving "deaf culture" (a nebulous concept, the entirety of which
appears to begin and end with sign language) into extinction. In the case of
Josh Aronson's documentary, most of which takes place, ironically, on Long
Island Sound, the focus is on the latest cochlear implant, a device that can
enable children who are born deaf to hear, but which only works if the
implantation is done while language skills are still developing. There don't
seem to be any risks or adverse side effects, but judging from the reaction of
the deaf community, and especially the deaf parents of the young girl Aronson
primarily focuses on, you'd think the cochlear implant was homosexual
"reparative" therapy being offered by fundamentalist Bible thumpers.
Let's see: From the medical perspective, the girl would be able to hear, and
talk on the phone, and have normal conversations with the average Joe. On the
other hand, if she remains deaf, she gets to speak in sign language! Or maybe
that's just the bigoted perspective of a hearing person. There's certainly
nothing less worthy about a deaf person, but to say there's nothing wrong with
them (ummm...their ears don't work?) seems a stretch. The film's tagline
exclaims that "the choice is not so simple," but from the perspective
of this reviewer, and most likely many of the film's viewers, it doesn't seem
like that tough a call.