
In his memoir, poet Raymond Antrobus writes of ‘deaf gain’ instead of hearing loss
NPR's Book of the Day · NPR
September 1, 20258m 46s
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Show Notes
When poet Raymond Antrobus was 6 years old, he learned he was deaf. His new memoir The Quiet Ear describes living in a world of in-betweenness, straddling intersections of race, class, hearing and deafness. In today’s episode, Antrobus joins NPR’s Mary Louise Kelly for a discussion that touches on his connection with the creative deaf community in London, his dad’s DJ sets, and differences between British and American Sign Language.
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