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Reading Victorian deafness : signs and sounds in Victorian literature and culture / Jennifer Esmail.

Van Pelt Library HV2716 .E86 2013
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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Esmail, Jennifer, 1979-
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Deaf people--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Deaf people.
Deaf people--Means of communication--Great Britain--History--19th century.
Sign language--History--19th century.
Sign language.
English literature--19th century--History and criticism.
English literature.
Deaf people in literature.
History.
Deaf people--Means of communication.
Great Britain.
Physical Description:
xi, 285 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Place of Publication:
Athens : Ohio University Press, [2013]
Summary:
Winner of the 2013 Sonya Rudikoff Award for best first book in Victorian Studies Short-listed for the 2013 British Society for Literature and Science Book Prize. Reading Victorian Deafness is the first book to address the crucial role that deaf people, and their unique language of signs, played in Victorian culture. Drawing on a range of works, from fiction by Charles Dickens and Wilkie Collins, to poetry by deaf poets and life writing by deaf memoirists Harriet Martineau and John Kitto, to scientific treatises by Alexander Graham Bell and Francis Galton, Reading Victorian Deafness argues that deaf people's language use was a public, influential, and contentious issue in Victorian Britain. The Victorians understood signed languages in multiple, and often contradictory, ways: they were objects of fascination and revulsion, were of scientific import and literary interest, and were considered both a unique mode of human communication and a vestige of a bestial heritage. Over the course of the nineteenth century, deaf people were increasingly stripped of their linguistic and cultural rights by a widespread pedagogical and cultural movement known as "oralism," comprising mainly hearing educators, physicians, and parents. Engaging with a group of human beings who used signs instead of speech challenged the Victorian understanding of humans as "the speaking animal" and the widespread understanding of "language" as a product of the voice. It is here that Reading Victorian Deafness offers substantial contributions to the fields of Victorian studies and disability studies. This book expands current scholarly conversations around orality, textuality, and sound while demonstrating how understandings of disability contributed to Victorian constructions of normalcy. Reading Victorian Deafness argues that deaf people were used as material test subjects for the Victorian process of understanding human language and, by extension, the definition of the human.
Contents:
Introduction
"Perchance my hand may touch the lyre:" deaf poetry and the politics of language
"I listened with my eyes": writing speech and reading deafness in the fiction of Charles Dickens and wilkie Collins
"Human in shape, but only half human in attributes": sign language, evolutionary theory, and the animal-human divide
"A deaf variety of the human race"?: sign language, deaf marriage, and utopian and dystopian visons of deaf communities
"Finding the shapes of sounds": prosthetic technology, speech, and Victorian deafness
Conclusion.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 255-272) and index.
ISBN:
9780821420348
0821420348
OCLC:
824119526

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