AT HØRE, AT HØRE EFTER, AT HØRE TIL: Strategier i forbindelse med høretab og høreapparater

Forfattere

  • Susanne Bisgaard

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i54.106747

Resumé

As long as the sense of hearing remains intact, the individual can participate in the

negotiation and production of social and cultural values in the contexts to which she or

he ascribes a meaning. But what happens when the sounds are muffled? The handling of

hearing loss is subject to substantial individual differences – some wish to participate in

all social contexts, others wish only to uphold contact to specific segments of the lifeworld.

The hard of hearing may be excluded from a number of contexts, but the hearing aid may

be a help to retain a position. Some use them in all their waking hours, others only in

specific contexts. The difference is due to physiological and technological circumstances,

because no two hearing losses are perceived in the same way. Moreover, the technology

of the hearing aid may help the user to hear better, but it does not restore natural hearing.

Typically, the hard of hearing go through a process, in which the physical hearing loss

is related to the lifeworld. In this process the individual moves from being a normal

hearing person to being hard of hearing. Being hard of hearing differed for the informants

from a wish to participate in social life to an utter loss of one’s functioning and a concern

with bodily appearance.

 

Downloads

Publiceret

2006-12-01

Citation/Eksport

Bisgaard, S. (2006). AT HØRE, AT HØRE EFTER, AT HØRE TIL: Strategier i forbindelse med høretab og høreapparater. Tidsskriftet Antropologi, (54). https://doi.org/10.7146/ta.v0i54.106747

Nummer

Sektion

Artikler