Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930
This new anthology showcases the work of Deaf writers during a critical formative period in their history. From 1830 to 1930, these writers conveyed their impressions in autobiographies, travel narratives, romances, non-fiction short stories, editorials, descriptive pieces, and other forms of prose. The quick, often evocative snapshots and observations featured here, many explicitly addressing deafness and sign language, reflect their urgency to record Deaf American life at this pivotal time. Using sensory details, dialogue, characterization, narrative movement, and creative prose, these writers emphasized the capabilities of Deaf people to counter events that threatened their way of life.

       The volume opens with “The Orphan Mute,” a sentimental description of the misfortune of deaf people written by John Robertson Burnet in 1835. Less than 50 years later, James Denison, the only Deaf delegate at the 1880 Convention of Instructors of the Deaf in Milan, published his “impressions” that questioned the majority’s passage of a strict oralism agenda. In 1908, Thomas Flowers wrote “I was a little human plant,” a paean to education without irony despite the concurrent policy banning African Americans from attending Gallaudet College. These and a host of other Deaf writers—Laurent Clerc, Kate Farlow, Edmund Booth, Laura Redden Searing, Freda W. Bauman, Vera Gammon, Isaac H. Benedict, James Nack, John Carlin, Joseph Mount and many more—reveal the vitality and resilience of Deaf writers in an era of wrenching change.

1114985321
Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930
This new anthology showcases the work of Deaf writers during a critical formative period in their history. From 1830 to 1930, these writers conveyed their impressions in autobiographies, travel narratives, romances, non-fiction short stories, editorials, descriptive pieces, and other forms of prose. The quick, often evocative snapshots and observations featured here, many explicitly addressing deafness and sign language, reflect their urgency to record Deaf American life at this pivotal time. Using sensory details, dialogue, characterization, narrative movement, and creative prose, these writers emphasized the capabilities of Deaf people to counter events that threatened their way of life.

       The volume opens with “The Orphan Mute,” a sentimental description of the misfortune of deaf people written by John Robertson Burnet in 1835. Less than 50 years later, James Denison, the only Deaf delegate at the 1880 Convention of Instructors of the Deaf in Milan, published his “impressions” that questioned the majority’s passage of a strict oralism agenda. In 1908, Thomas Flowers wrote “I was a little human plant,” a paean to education without irony despite the concurrent policy banning African Americans from attending Gallaudet College. These and a host of other Deaf writers—Laurent Clerc, Kate Farlow, Edmund Booth, Laura Redden Searing, Freda W. Bauman, Vera Gammon, Isaac H. Benedict, James Nack, John Carlin, Joseph Mount and many more—reveal the vitality and resilience of Deaf writers in an era of wrenching change.

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Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930

Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930

Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930

Deaf American Prose, 1830-1930

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Overview

This new anthology showcases the work of Deaf writers during a critical formative period in their history. From 1830 to 1930, these writers conveyed their impressions in autobiographies, travel narratives, romances, non-fiction short stories, editorials, descriptive pieces, and other forms of prose. The quick, often evocative snapshots and observations featured here, many explicitly addressing deafness and sign language, reflect their urgency to record Deaf American life at this pivotal time. Using sensory details, dialogue, characterization, narrative movement, and creative prose, these writers emphasized the capabilities of Deaf people to counter events that threatened their way of life.

       The volume opens with “The Orphan Mute,” a sentimental description of the misfortune of deaf people written by John Robertson Burnet in 1835. Less than 50 years later, James Denison, the only Deaf delegate at the 1880 Convention of Instructors of the Deaf in Milan, published his “impressions” that questioned the majority’s passage of a strict oralism agenda. In 1908, Thomas Flowers wrote “I was a little human plant,” a paean to education without irony despite the concurrent policy banning African Americans from attending Gallaudet College. These and a host of other Deaf writers—Laurent Clerc, Kate Farlow, Edmund Booth, Laura Redden Searing, Freda W. Bauman, Vera Gammon, Isaac H. Benedict, James Nack, John Carlin, Joseph Mount and many more—reveal the vitality and resilience of Deaf writers in an era of wrenching change.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781563685651
Publisher: Gallaudet University Press
Publication date: 09/15/2013
Series: Gallaudet Deaf Literature , #2
Edition description: 1st Edition
Pages: 304
Product dimensions: 6.90(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Jennifer L. Nelson is Professor of English at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC.

Kristen Harmon is Professor of English at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC.


Table of Contents

Foreword Christopher Krentz ix

Acknowledgments xiii

Introduction Jennifer L. Nelson Kristen C. Harmon 1

The Orphan Mute, 1835 John Robertson Burnet 11

My Sister's Funeral, 1835 18

Law Proceedings, 1839 James Nack 22

The Last Words of a Bachelor, 1839 24

Visits to Some of the Schools for the Deaf and Dumb in France and England, 1848 Laurent Clerc 31

The Wonderful Coffee-Mil!, 1849 Unknown 33

Aerial Navigation by a Deaf-Mute, 1855 Isaac H. Benedict 36

A Family History, 1856 Mary St. Cloud Belches 44

"Joe the Jersey Mute": Recollections of a Deaf and Dumb Teacher, 1858 Joseph Mown 48

A Leaf from a Teacher's Diary, 1865 51

Excerpt from The Scratchsides Family, 1868 John Carlin 55

The Realm of Singing, c. 1872 Howard Glyndon (Laura Redden Searing) 60

The Widow Waring's Christmas Surprise, 1872 66

Selections from Adventures of a Deaf-Mute in the White Mountains, 1874 William B. Swett 74

Impressions of the Milan Convention, 1881 James Denison 81

Booth's Reminiscences of Gallaudet, 1881 Edwin (Edmund) Booth 90

Selections from Silent Life and Silent Language, or, the Inner Life of a Mute, 1883 Kate M. Farlow 92

Scene in a Railroad Station, 1893 W.C 105

A Romance of Far Away Cuba, 1900 Frieda W. Bauman 107

What One Girl Hears and Sees, 1901 Hypatia Boyd 112

What One Girl Hears and Sees (continued), 1901 116

Reflections of a Deaf-Mute Philosopher, 1903 Douglas Tilden 122

What I Am Doing, 1905 Helen Keller 127

Is It Beneficial to a Deaf Oralist to Learn the Sign Language, 1906 Alice C. Jennings 133

More Extracts from the "Zeno" Mss: The So-called "Tribe of Fools," 1907 Douglas Tilden 137

Bro. Hart's "Something Greater," 1908 Alice Taylor Terry 150

Life after Graduation, c. 1908 Thomas Flowers 157

A Sophomore's Revenge, 1896/1910 Howard L. Terry 160

New Vision for the Blind, 1913 Helen Keller 164

The Little Sign for Friend, 1915 Margaret Prescott Montague 167

Enchanted Princess, 1916/1934 175

Sound-Why Not Let It Alone? 1919 Alice Taylor Terry 188

The Three Doors to Knowledge, 1919 Vera Gammon 193

The Test of the Heart, 1921 Guie Leo Deliglio 198

Miss Hester of Sunset Valley, 1921 203

De Mortuis Nil Nisi Bonum, 1922 George W. Vedtiz 211

Selections from Mickey's Harvest: The Checkered Life of an Unusual Boy, 1922 Howard L. Terry 214

Pro and Con, 1923 James F. Brady 228

A Christmas Story, 1923 232

A New York Deaf Artist at Hollywood: Some Experiences in Getting a Foothold in the Movie Studios of Hollywood, 1925 Albert V. Baffin 237

By Their Signs Ye Shall Know Them, 1926 James F. Brady 242

In an Impromptu Don Quixotic Tilt with a Modern Wind Mill, called Automobile, with Dire Results to Himself, 1926 Albert V. Baffin 245

A Fight with a Highwayman, 1927 Roger Demosthenes O'Kelly 249

The Life of a Lousy Extra, 1928 Albert V. Ballin 253

The Wound, 1930 Howard T. Hofsteater 258

Afterword Octavian Robinson 259

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