Gallaudet University Press, 2007 Paper: 978-1-56368-359-6 | eISBN: 978-1-56368-403-6 Library of Congress Classification HV2530.D43 2007 Dewey Decimal Classification 305.908209730903
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
The Deaf History Reader presents nine masterful chapters that bring together a remarkably vivid depiction of the varied Deaf experience in America. This collection features the finest scholarship from a noteworthy group of historians, including Reginald Boyd, Barry A. Crouch, Mary French, Brian H. Greenwald, Harlan Lane, Harry G. Lang, Kent R. Olney, Richard Pillard, Jill Hendricks Porco, Michael Reis, and volume editor John Vickrey Van Cleve.
The incisive articles collected here include an exploration of the genesis of the Deaf community and early evidence of the use of sign language; a comparison of a failed, oralist school for deaf students in Virginia to the success of the American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut; the development of Deaf consciousness among people who carried a dominant gene for deafness; a biographical sketch of Mary Ann Walworth Booth, an accomplished deaf woman who lived on the Western frontier; an account of Deaf agency in the Indiana Institution and the Evansville Day School; the early antecedents of mainstreaming deaf children despite the objections of their parents; a profile of Alexander Graham Bell that contrasts his support of eugenics to his defense of Deaf rights; the conflicting actions of supervisors of the Pennsylvania Society for the Advancement of the Deaf; and finally, the critical role played by deaf people in the Chicago Mission for the Deaf’s success in maintaining the Deaf community for more than five decades. The remarkably rich range of topics treated in The Deaf History Reader assure its future status as a standard resource for all Deaf scholars and students.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
John Vickrey Van Cleve is former Professor of History at Gallaudet University, Washington, DC.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Preface
1. Genesis of a Community: The American Deaf Experience in the Seventeenth and
Eighteenth Centuries
Harry G. Lang
2. Hearing with the Eye: The Rise of Deaf Education in the United States
Barry A. Crouch and Brian H. Greenwald
3. Origins of the American Deaf-World: Assimilating and Differentiating Societies
and Their Relation to Genetic Patterning
Harlan Lane, Richard C. Pillard, and Mary French
4. Mary Ann Walworth Booth
Jill Hendricks Porco
5. A Tale of Two Schools: The Indiana Institution and the Evansville Day School,
1879-1912
Michael Reis
6. The Academic Integration of Deaf Children: A Historical Perspective
John Vickrey Van Cleve
7. Taking Stock: Alexander Graham Bell and Eugenics, 1883-1922
Brian H. Greenwald
8. Deaf Autonomy and Deaf Dependence: The Early Years of the Pennsylvania
Society for the Advancement of the Deaf
Reginald Boyd and John Vickrey Van Cleve
9. The Chicago Mission for the Deaf
Kent R. Olney
Contributors
Index
Gallaudet University Press, 2007 Paper: 978-1-56368-359-6 eISBN: 978-1-56368-403-6
The Deaf History Reader presents nine masterful chapters that bring together a remarkably vivid depiction of the varied Deaf experience in America. This collection features the finest scholarship from a noteworthy group of historians, including Reginald Boyd, Barry A. Crouch, Mary French, Brian H. Greenwald, Harlan Lane, Harry G. Lang, Kent R. Olney, Richard Pillard, Jill Hendricks Porco, Michael Reis, and volume editor John Vickrey Van Cleve.
The incisive articles collected here include an exploration of the genesis of the Deaf community and early evidence of the use of sign language; a comparison of a failed, oralist school for deaf students in Virginia to the success of the American School for the Deaf in Hartford, Connecticut; the development of Deaf consciousness among people who carried a dominant gene for deafness; a biographical sketch of Mary Ann Walworth Booth, an accomplished deaf woman who lived on the Western frontier; an account of Deaf agency in the Indiana Institution and the Evansville Day School; the early antecedents of mainstreaming deaf children despite the objections of their parents; a profile of Alexander Graham Bell that contrasts his support of eugenics to his defense of Deaf rights; the conflicting actions of supervisors of the Pennsylvania Society for the Advancement of the Deaf; and finally, the critical role played by deaf people in the Chicago Mission for the Deaf’s success in maintaining the Deaf community for more than five decades. The remarkably rich range of topics treated in The Deaf History Reader assure its future status as a standard resource for all Deaf scholars and students.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
John Vickrey Van Cleve is former Professor of History at Gallaudet University, Washington, DC.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents
Preface
1. Genesis of a Community: The American Deaf Experience in the Seventeenth and
Eighteenth Centuries
Harry G. Lang
2. Hearing with the Eye: The Rise of Deaf Education in the United States
Barry A. Crouch and Brian H. Greenwald
3. Origins of the American Deaf-World: Assimilating and Differentiating Societies
and Their Relation to Genetic Patterning
Harlan Lane, Richard C. Pillard, and Mary French
4. Mary Ann Walworth Booth
Jill Hendricks Porco
5. A Tale of Two Schools: The Indiana Institution and the Evansville Day School,
1879-1912
Michael Reis
6. The Academic Integration of Deaf Children: A Historical Perspective
John Vickrey Van Cleve
7. Taking Stock: Alexander Graham Bell and Eugenics, 1883-1922
Brian H. Greenwald
8. Deaf Autonomy and Deaf Dependence: The Early Years of the Pennsylvania
Society for the Advancement of the Deaf
Reginald Boyd and John Vickrey Van Cleve
9. The Chicago Mission for the Deaf
Kent R. Olney
Contributors
Index