What Does the Sea Sound Like?
Memoirs of a CODA (Child of
Deaf Adults)
Evie Mahoney
Publisher: Mary
Egan Publishing
Release date: 29
October 2016
Category: Autobiography
Paperback: 150
pages
RRP: $30.00
A CODA (Child of Deaf Adults)
is a hearing child who is raised by Deaf parents. CODAs are, in effect,
bicultural - living in two distinct cultures; that of the Deaf and of the
Hearing. This books gives us a fascinating insight into both cultures, from a
unique New Zealand perspective.
Evie Mahoney and her five
hearing siblings were raised by two deaf parents in Auckland, New Zealand. As
a CODA (Child of Deaf Adults), and the eldest, she lived much of her early
life in a largely deaf environment.
Sensitive to how hearing people
outside that environment reacted to her family, she lived on the edge between
two cultures and slipped naturally into the role of interpreter from a young
age, ensuring the Deaf and Hearing understood each other. Her way of
communicating with the Deaf was by lip reading and improvised signs, as she
did not know formal sign language.
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Six decades later, Evie is happy
to have been raised by inspirational parents and enjoys the unique perspective
that the deaf culture has given her. She has seen improvements in communication
for the deaf, with New Zealand Sign Language now an official language becoming
more widely used, and technology providing more avenues to communicate
visually. However, Evie sees attitudes of the Hearing towards the Deaf still
having a long way to go towards awareness and acceptance of people who cannot
hear.
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