Educação de surdos : o discurso da inclusão educacional produzido por surdos e ouvintes
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Universidade do Estado do Amazonas
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In recent years, social inclusion policies have gained a large proportion in our country and,
consequently, the education also assumes this inclusive character. Regarding the deaf, it can
be seen that inclusive education has different meanings, because the discursive formation of
the hearings who have promoted these policies of educational inclusion is in disagreement
with the discursive formation of the brazilian deaf community. For the understanding of these
discursive formations it was used, mainly, studies of researchers such as Capovilla (2006,
2012, 2016), Quadros and Karnopp (2004), Quadros (2004, 2006), Ferreira (2010), Strobel
(2015) and others. As theorical-analytical referential, we adopted the French Discourse
Analysis with theorists such as Pêcheux (2014), Mussalin (2001), Fuchs (1997), Orlandi
(2013) and others. The corpus analyzed was consisted of legislation, documents, videos,
interviews, posters and leaders’ speeches of the deaf movements. In the analysis, it was
possible to notice that according to the proposals of the Ministry of Education, deaf students
must study in regular schools, with the presence of translators/interpreters of Brazilian Sign
Language and have the right to attend the Specialized Educational Attendance in the opposite
shift of the class. Thus, the deaf can be inserted into the hearing society and avoid the
formation of segregationist spaces. On the other hand, the brazilian deaf community require to
have a specialized school where the sign language occupies the function of first language and
the language oralized as second, in the written mode. In this context, educational inclusion
provides a devaluation of the deaf culture and its linguistic identity. Thus, it is possible to
notice that this discursive formations establish relations with different conceptions about the
deafness. Thus, this work sought to contribute to the understanding of how the meaning
effects of educational inclusion work in the discourses of inclusive policies and of the deaf
community.
Keywords: Discursive formation. Discourse. Educational inclusion. Deaf community.
Bilingual education.