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  3. The radical lives of Helen Keller

The radical lives of Helen Keller

Kim E. Nielsen
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  • Contents

  • Reviews

  • Related Titles

  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright and Permissions
  • Preface to the Electronic Edition
  • List of Illustrations
  • List of Video Clips
  • [Dedication]
  • Acknowledgments
  • Timeline
  • Introduction
  • 1 I Do Not Like This World As It Is 1900-1924
  • 2 The Call of the Sightless 1924-1937
  • 3 Manna in My Desert Places 1937-1948
  • 4 I Will Not Allow Polly to Climb a Pyramid 1948-1968
  • 5 One of the Least Free People on Earth The Making and Remaking of Helen Keller
  • Additional Documents
    • "An Apology For Going to College" by Helen Keller
    • "A Chant of Darkness" by Helen Keller
    • "Put Your Husband in the Kitchen" by Helen Keller
    • "Strike Against War" by Helen Keller
    • "Woman and Peace" by Helen Keller
    • Address in Washington, D. C. (1925) by Helen Keller
    • Letter to Will Rogers by Helen Keller
  • Notes
    • Abbreviations
    • Notes to the Introduction
    • Notes to Chapter 1
    • Notes to Chapter 2
    • Notes to Chapter 3
    • Notes to Chapter 4
    • Notes to Chapter 5
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Author
Reviews
Journal AbbreviationLabelURL
SLS 5.2 (Winter 2005): 248-255 http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/sign_language_studies/v005/5.2osgood.html
Related Titles
HEB IdTitleAuthorsPublication Information
Peace as a Women's Issue: A History of the U.S. Movement for World Peace and Women's Rights. Alonso, Harriet Hyman. Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press, 1993.
heb02822.0001.001 Forbidden Signs: American Culture and the Campaign against Sign Language. Baynton, Douglas C. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1996.
heb02823.0001.001 Enforcing Normalcy: Disability, Deafness, and the Body. Davis, Lennard J. London: Verso, 1995.
heb02824.0001.001 The Education of Laura Bridgman: First Deaf and Blind Person to Learn Language. Freeberg, Ernest. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2001.
The Imprisoned Guest: Samuel Howe and Laura Bridgman, the Original Deaf-Blind Girl. Gitter, Elizabeth. New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2008.
heb02825.0001.001 Everyone Here Spoke Sign Language: Hereditary Deafness on Martha's Vineyard. Groce, Nora Ellen. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985.
Writing a Woman's Life. Heilbrun, Carolyn G. New York: Ballantine Books, 1989.
The New Disability History: American Perspectives. Longmore, Paul K., and Lauri Umansky. New York: New York University Press, 2001.
The Black Stork: Eugenics and the Death of 'Defective' Babies in American Medicine and Motion Pictures Since 1915. Pernick, Martin S. New York: Oxford University Press USA, 1996.
heb02826.0001.001 Extraordinary Bodies: Figuring Physical Disability in American Culture and Literature. Thomson, Rosemarie Garland. New York: Columbia University Press, 1997.
Citable Link
Published: 2007
Publisher: New York University Press
ISBN(s)
  • 9780814758465 (ebook)
Subject
  • American: 1900-present

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Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Anne Sullivan at twenty-one year of age, the year she met Keller.

Figure 1. Portrait of Anne Sullivan at twenty-one year of age, the year she met Keller.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Keller at the time of her Radcliffe graduation, 1904.

Figure 2. Portrait of Keller at the time of her Radcliffe graduation, 1904.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Anne Sullivan, 1881.

Figure 3. Anne Sullivan, 1881.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Kate Keller.

Figure 4. Kate Keller.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Wright-Humason School for the Deaf, New York City, 1895. Keller is sitting on the far left, facing left, holding Sullivan's hand.

Figure 5. Wright-Humason School for the Deaf, New York City, 1895. Keller is sitting on the far left, facing left, holding Sullivan's hand.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Helen Keller, John Macy, and Anne Sullivan Macy, undated.

Figure 6. Portrait of Helen Keller, John Macy, and Anne Sullivan Macy, undated.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

White House, 1931. This crowd scene, just outside the White House, includes Keller, Macy, President Herbert Hoover and First Lady Lou Henry Hoover in the front row. This photo was taken in 1931 during an international conference of workers for blind people. Also front and near-center is Robert B. Irwin, Executive Director of AFB.

Figure 7. White House, 1931. This crowd scene, just outside the White House, includes Keller, Macy, President Herbert Hoover and First Lady Lou Henry Hoover in the front row. This photo was taken in 1931 during an international conference of workers for blind people. Also front and near-center is Robert B. Irwin, Executive Director of AFB.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Helen Keller, Anne Sullivan, and Polly Thomson, 1932. Sullivan's Scottish terrier, probably Darky, and Keller's Great Dane, probably Helga, are included.

Figure 8. Portrait of Helen Keller, Anne Sullivan, and Polly Thomson, 1932. Sullivan's Scottish terrier, probably Darky, and Keller's Great Dane, probably Helga, are included.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Keller near Orkney Islands, 1932.

Figure 9. Portrait of Keller near Orkney Islands, 1932.

AP/Wide World Photos.

Jo Davidson sculpting Helen Keller in his French studio.

Figure 10. Jo Davidson sculpting Helen Keller in his French studio.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Portrait of Helen Keller, Polly Thomson, and three unidentified World War II veterans, taken during her wartime hospital tours.

Figure 11. Portrait of Helen Keller, Polly Thomson, and three unidentified World War II veterans, taken during her wartime hospital tours.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

At Moore General Hospital, North Carolina, 1945. Keller is meeting Sergeant Paul Grossman of Nebraska.

Figure 12. At Moore General Hospital, North Carolina, 1945. Keller is meeting Sergeant Paul Grossman of Nebraska.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Helen Keller and Polly Thomson in Nagasaki, Japan, 1948.

Figure 13. Helen Keller and Polly Thomson in Nagasaki, Japan, 1948.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Polly Thomson, Helen Keller, and unidentified U.S. military personnel in Japan, 1948.

Figure 14. Polly Thomson, Helen Keller, and unidentified U.S. military personnel in Japan, 1948.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Helen Keller and Polly Thomson in Fukuoka, Japan, 1948.

Figure 15. Helen Keller and Polly Thomson in Fukuoka, Japan, 1948.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Polly Thomson and Helen Keller in Nagoya, Japan, 1948. Note Keller lip-reading Polly Thomson before the huge crowd.

Figure 16. Polly Thomson and Helen Keller in Nagoya, Japan, 1948. Note Keller lip-reading Polly Thomson before the huge crowd.

Courtesy of the American Federation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Federation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Jo Davidson's 1945 bust of Helen Keller.

Figure 17. Jo Davidson's 1945 bust of Helen Keller.

Corbis. © Bettmann/CORBIS. Used with permission.

Keller with Zulu tribes people in South Africa, 1951.

Figure 18. Keller with Zulu tribes people in South Africa, 1951.

Courtesy of the American Foundation for the Blind. Used with permission of the American Foundation for the Blind, Helen Keller Archives.

Formal portrait of Keller in 1955.

Figure 19. Formal portrait of Keller in 1955.

Photograph by William Sauro. © Bettmann/CORBIS. Used with permission.

Eleanor Roosevelt and Helen Keller at the February 1, 1955, farewell banquet for Keller before her departure for India, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Japan.

Figure 20. Eleanor Roosevelt and Helen Keller at the February 1, 1955, farewell banquet for Keller before her departure for India, Hong Kong, the Philippines, and Japan.

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