Nope.ravenlord wrote:The key is each girl's handicap is how they deal with it. Emi runs with prosethics, Hanako hides with books, Lilly sees with her fingers.
We all know how Lily deals with her handicap..
Nope.ravenlord wrote:The key is each girl's handicap is how they deal with it. Emi runs with prosethics, Hanako hides with books, Lilly sees with her fingers.
ravenlord wrote:metalangel wrote:How else can Shizune deal with her handicap apart from writing notes and using an interpreter?ravenlord wrote:The key is each girl's handicap is how they deal with it. Emi runs with prosethics, Hanako hides with books, Lilly sees with her fingers, Rin paints with her feet. The cut scenes all allude to that.
Shizune's handicap is communication, but her sigining doesn't help with that. He lack of communication isn't because of a lack of voice and hearing, it is because of a lack of empathy and understanding. She uses her eyes and she uses paper during her cg, but the point is that she deals with her "handicap" by simply her being her, and only doing what she knows how to do best. What we see in the CG is Misha and Hasio being the ones to make the attempt to close the gap with her, and not the other way around, because that's just the way Shizune is. The consequences of that limitation is what constitutes the climax of act 4.
Don't make me add you to my ignore list . . .
I've played Grid1. Let me back 'cook up on this and say that it was a very very good reason.Silentcook wrote:Go take a look at old Grid1 if you want to see attempts at depicting sign language through sprites.
Hint: in the end, we decided against it for a reason.
He is trolling. I flat out explained in my post, word for word, exactly how she deals with her handicap "apart from writing notes and using an interpreter". He asked again anyway, so assuming he is trolling actually gives him the benifit of the doubt. The alternative is that he didn't read the post before replying, or he doesn't understand English. You be the judge.Pseudogenesis wrote:Seeing as his Avatar and signature both contain Shizune, I doubt he's trolling. You seem to jump the gun on the ignore list a bit.
Do you consider what I'm saying trolling? I feel I'm addressing many of the same points he is.ravenlord wrote:He is trolling. I flat out explained in my post, word for word, exactly how she deals with her handicap "apart from writing notes and using an interpreter". He asked again anyway, so assuming he is trolling actually gives him the benifit of the doubt. The alternative is that he didn't read the post before replying, or he doesn't understand English. You be the judge.Pseudogenesis wrote:Seeing as his Avatar and signature both contain Shizune, I doubt he's trolling. You seem to jump the gun on the ignore list a bit.
You complained that she deals with her handicap by 'just being her', as if her attempts at using sign and note writing were somehow insufficient. I was curious as to what else she should could do to communicate apart from those two things. You responded by suggesting that I either don't speak English, didn't bother reading your post, or am some sort of mental defective.ravenlord wrote:He is trolling. I flat out explained in my post, word for word, exactly how she deals with her handicap "apart from writing notes and using an interpreter". He asked again anyway, so assuming he is trolling actually gives him the benifit of the doubt. The alternative is that he didn't read the post before replying, or he doesn't understand English. You be the judge.Pseudogenesis wrote:Seeing as his Avatar and signature both contain Shizune, I doubt he's trolling. You seem to jump the gun on the ignore list a bit.
That's because Shizune is a type of tsundere - she's not really the type to get all in front of everyone. She shows her appreciation in different ways - such as the fact that Misha and Hisao end up being her closest friends. The same two people who happened to learn sign language to speak to her. Coincidence? Hardly.Now Hisao and Misha already know how to write then they meet her, so you'd think that writing things down would be easier, but Shizune doesn't like doing things that way so they have to go with the option that SHE wants.
She seems incapable of even trying to meet them halfway. Maybe I'm remember it wrong, but I can't recall her being extremely happy and grateful for either of them to go through that hassle in order to talk to her. She might be happy that it's more efficient, but she doesn't seem grateful that they'd go through the trouble for her.
It's not just her - deaf people the world over share that sentiment.If she won't, you have to wonder why. Is she embarrassed by the sound of her voice? It would fit the character. That would mean she values her own pride more than the ability to communicate with others.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/KuudereDrNonookee wrote:That's because Shizune is a type of tsundere
Thank you. That's the word I was looking for, although I couldn't remember it at the time. There are so many types of -deres out there that it's hard to keep track of them all.Xanatos wrote:http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/KuudereDrNonookee wrote:That's because Shizune is a type of tsundere
Well, I can understand that, to a certain degree. And I agree, if it's *possible* for a deaf person to learn to speak and/or understand spoken language to a reasonable degree, it's probably a good idea - it never hurts to have an extra tool in your communication arsenal. I was referring more to 'absolute deaf' people - those who can't hear at all, or for whom hearing aids or the like aren't possible (or desired). Shizune is one (at least, as far as I know...I don't recall any mention of her ever having or using a hearing aid), and for people like her learning to speak would be both extremely difficult and potentially embarassing.If I were to have a deaf kid that could hear with hearing aids and/or Cochlear Implant, I'd focus on my kid learning to speak and hear too. Not because I want to deny him an enjoyable youth but because I truly believe that being able to speak and hear is simply the best option I have to enjoy life as it stands now. I would also make sure that he knows Sign Language, so he can use an interpreter when needed... But I truly believe that he needs to be able to make friends regardless of whether they're hearing or deaf and being able to converse with them without barriers.
I know what you mean. That is what I was referring to with my school years until university. The number of people I regularly talked to as some form of friend? That was at most 4 at any given time, I think. I didn't really set out to significantly change that, to get on the same level playing field. That was my mistake all those years, in hindsight. I was the loner, because I acted like it. That is what I changed in university from the beginning and now I have a group of people I regularly talk to, people are talking to me much quicker... But I indeed didn't have the disadvantage of Shizune to be able to directly communicate without interpreters (even though I practiced YEARS upon YEARS on that skill since I was small). That is why I'd raise my kid with speech if he can hear somehow. That is why I'd deny him the opportunity to choose for himself whether to learn to hear and talk until he is old enough to truly realize the consequences, because I don't want to throw away the natural learning stages that occur in our brains nor to start at zero if he seriously decides to start (because believe me, it is very discouraging starting from zero. I've experienced how difficult and long the road of learning to hear is thanks to getting a Cochlear Implant and the only reason that I truly kept going and am as skilled in hearing and talking as I am right now is that I always depended on hearing, not on signing). I don't know what I'll do though if he is deaf in a way that hearing aids and Cochlear Implants won't help (that pretty much requires brain 'damage' or the hearing nerve being damaged, as a Cochlear Implant circumvents the ear canal and cochlea (and everything in between)). I guess in that case he'd be lucky that I learned Sign Language But whether I'd send him off to a Deaf school or a regular school, that would be a serious dilemma for me.DrNonookee wrote:Ultimately, though, I don't think it's even the whole "speech vs. sign language" thing at all. Shizune's problem is more the fact that her deafness robs her of what would otherwise be a natural and integral part of inter-personal relationships for most normal human beings. Even if she did learn to compensate by *any* means (sign language, learning to speak and read lips, etc.), that sense of alienation - that feeling of being inherently 'different', socially-speaking, in such a fundamental way - is the sort of thing that sticks with you and is very hard to shake. I know this from experience - I'm a shy, introverted fellow, and part of the reason I don't make friends easily is because I feel alienated from more social people because of it. It's not to say the person doesn't *want* to reach out to others - it's just hard to feel like you belong when there's this nagging feeling that you're not on the same level playing field as everyone else. This would be especially true for someone as driven as Shizune - she'd be fundamentally upset that she can't naturally communicate with people and has to settle for 'imperfect' methods like signing or writing at all.
- Japanese Deaf CultureAlso with each country or group of people and it’s culture, there is a difference between the young and the old. In Japan’s Deaf culture a few years ago, following High School graduation, Deaf children would search out a group of Deaf on their own. But now, with the pressure of going to a top-tier High School (in Japan, High School and College’s importance is reverse to that of America), Deaf schools are seen as non-Academic, and thus entices the younger Deaf generation to go to a hearing institution. “...[K]ids go to mainstream schools and might never meet a deaf person” (Monaghan, 2003). But perhaps most surprising of all is that some of Japan’s Deaf are isolating themselves: “predominantly young people identify as hard of hearing or hearing impaired...over ‘deaf’ and do not join deaf groups. Why are younger deaf avoiding the traditional deaf organizations” (Monaghan, 2003)? The Tokyo Association of the Hearing Disabled, formerly known as the Tokyo Association of the Deaf, changed it’s name solely to attract the youth that did not refer to his or herself as Deaf (Monaghan, 2003). It is important to note that not every Japanese youth has denounced, or failed to identify, with Deaf. What is known as U-Turn Deaf, some are returning to Deaf schools because it is where their friends are and ultimately how they identify themselves (Monaghan, 2003). Or in the case of “Deaf Shock,” people who never identified themselves as Deaf are connected with Deaf groups and are harshly awakened to find a part of their identity they did not know they had (Monaghan, 2003).
It wouldn't be appropriate to accept these as gospel, seeing as how they were just the first things I could Google, but Deaf Culture being a more recent development in Japan might be relevant to what we are discussing here. Would Shizune have not gotten a cochlear implant because of the nature of her deafness? Or would have she not gotten one because of just not having access to/knowing about such a thing at a young age? Would it have been embarrassing for Jigoro to look into? I mean, Jigoro's in the generation that might view something as practical as a video phone as invasive.Harumi’s reaction was shock at the idea that interpreters she did not know would be able to see into her house. She explained that in Japan the distinction between private space and public space is very strongly felt and expressed doubt that Video Relay Services could ever come to Japan as she thought Deaf people would never be willing to allow strangers to see into the sacred private space of their homes. So despite the many similarities we identified in Deaf/hearing interactions in our two countries, the power exerted by specific cultural values still illuminated the defining differences between us.
CIs aren't a panacea, they don't work for everyone, though I'd bet on Jigoro having investigated them as part of his attempts to 'fix' Shizune. There is a part in the story where we discover that Shizune doesn't like using her phone, or am I mistaken? That's interesting stuff you found, however.WorldlyWiseman wrote:
It wouldn't be appropriate to accept these as gospel, seeing as how they were just the first things I could Google, but Deaf Culture being a more recent development in Japan might be relevant to what we are discussing here. Would Shizune have not gotten a cochlear implant because of the nature of her deafness? Or would have she not gotten one because of just not having access to/knowing about such a thing at a young age? Would it have been embarrassing for Jigoro to look into? I mean, Jigoro's in the generation that might view something as practical as a video phone as invasive.
So many questions, swimming around my head.