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  3. In Our Own Hands: Essays in Deaf History, 1780–1970

In Our Own Hands: Essays in Deaf History, 1780–1970

Brian H. Greenwald and Joseph J. Murray, Editors
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  • Overview

  • Contents

This collection of new research examines the development of deaf people's autonomy and citizenship discourses as they sought access to full citizenship rights in local and national settings. Covering the period of 1780–1970, the essays in this collection explore deaf peoples' claims to autonomy in their personal, religious, social, and organizational lives and make the case that deaf Americans sought to engage, claim, and protect deaf autonomy and citizenship in the face of rising nativism and eugenic currents of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century. These previously unexplored areas in Deaf history intersect with important subthemes in American history, such as Southern history, religious history, and Western history. The contributors demonstrate that as deaf people pushed for their rights as citizens, they met with resistance from hearing people, and the results of their efforts were decidedly mixed. These works reinforce the Deaf community's longstanding desire to be part of the nation. In Our Own Hands contributes to an increased understanding of the struggle for citizenship and expands our current understanding of race, gender, religion, and other trends in Deaf history.
  • Cover
  • In Our Own Hands
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • 1 Why Give Him a Sign Which Hearing People Do Not Understand … ? Public Discourses about Deafness, 1780–1914
  • 2 “Enlightened Selfishness”: Gallaudet College and Deaf Citizenship in the United States, 1864–1904
  • 3 Citizenship and Education: The Case of the Black Deaf Community
  • 4 From Deaf Autonomy to Parent Autonomy in the Chicago Public Day Schools, 1874–1920
  • 5 “Are We Not as Much Citizens as Any Body?” Alice Taylor Terry and Deaf Citizenship in the Early Twentieth Century
  • 6 Unchurched, Unchampioned, and Undone: The St. Ann’s Church Controversy, 1894–1897
  • 7 In Pursuit of Citizenship: Campaigns Against Peddling in Deaf America, 1880s–1950s
  • 8 Revisiting the Memoir: Contesting Deaf Autonomy and the Real Tragedy of Alexander Graham Bell
  • 9 Compromising for Agency: The Role of the NAD during the American Eugenics Movement, 1880–1940
  • 10 Normalization and Abnormal Genes: Hereditary Deafness Research at the Clarke School for the Deaf, 1930–1950
  • 11 The “Breakaways”: Deaf Citizens’ Groups in Australia in the 1920s and 1930s
  • 12 Divine and Secular: Reverend Robert Capers Fletcher and the Southern Deaf Community, 1931–1972
  • Contributors
  • Index
Citable Link
Published: 2016
Publisher: Gallaudet University Press
ISBN(s)
  • 978-1-56368-661-0 (ebook)
  • 978-1-56368-660-3 (paper)
Subject
  • Deaf -- United States -- History.
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