Description |
xvii, 537 pages : illustrations, portraits ; 24 cm |
Contents |
Includes index |
Summary |
"When the Mind Hears, the first comprehensive history of the deaf, is also a powerful and compassionate study of the anatomy of prejudice and the motives and means of oppression. It is a narrative, told largely from the vantage point of Laurent Clerc, the deaf Frenchman who was an intellectual leader of the deaf community in France and then in America. Ultimately, the story of the deaf is a tragic one, as educators throughout history have sought to abolish sign language from the education of the deaf. The debate, involving such issues as minority rights, integration (or "mainstreaming"), and bilingual education, rages anew today. Scrupulously documented but never dispassionate, When the Mind Hears vividly conveys the anger and frustration of all those who, deprived of their language, are deprived of their rightful heritage."--Provided by publisher |
Analysis |
Clerc, Laurent |
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Deaf Biography |
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Deaf Education History |
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Deaf History |
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Discrimination in education History |
Notes |
Includes index |
Bibliography |
Bibliography: pages [457]-518 |
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Includes index |
Subject |
Clerc, Laurent, 1785-1869.
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Deaf -- Biography.
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Deaf -- Education -- History.
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Deaf -- History.
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Deaf -- United States -- Bibliography.
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Deaf -- United States -- Biography.
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Deaf -- United States -- History.
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Discrimination in education -- History.
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Deafness -- history.
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LC no. |
83043201 |
ISBN |
0394508785 |
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