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NPR's Ailsa Chang speaks with Amanda Morris about how sign language evolves over time, the subject of her recent piece in The New York Times.
If recent trends in the Ivy League are anything to go by, 2019 is the year the tide turns on ASL education in the US.
American sign language (ASL) is a visual language using hand gestures, facial expressions, and body movements, primarily used by the Deaf community in North America.
Ubiquitous video technology and social media have given deaf people a new way to communicate. They’re using it to transform American Sign Language.
The emotionality of ASL can free you from the trap of precision. By Hannah Seo When I arrived on the second floor of a commercial building in Manhattan for my first sign-language class, a man took ...
How American Sign Language Masters Are Transforming the Culture for Deaf Actors Pro TheWrap Special Report: “I made sure to surround myself with deaf collaborators who would help me tell an ...
Deaf actors, Deaf culture and sign language are stepping into the limelight in stunning fashion at the 94th Academy Awards ceremony — with three films prominently featuring all three up for ...
"Sign language is very directional," said Bradbury. "When an action is happening, it's simply happening to somebody. So to try and express this abstract idea, you have to sort of put the person there.