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Interpreters in our midst

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journal contribution
posted on 2025-05-10, 07:36 authored by Breda Carty
When deaf people work in professional environments and participate in public events, we are often accompanied by sign language interpreters. This usually means wonderfully enhanced access – we can learn, participate and network in ways which are difficult if not impossible on our own. But while we often try to insist that our interpreters are ‘invisible’, that we are the ones learning, engaging in dialogue and consuming services, we are regularly bemused by the public fascination and focus on our interpreters – sometimes at the expense of their attention to us. When interpreters are in our midst, it seems it is not always clear whose interests they are representing.

History

Journal title

M/C Journal

Volume

13

Issue

3

Publisher

Queensland University of Technology

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Education and Arts

School

School of Education

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