Current academic discourse frequently understates the role of religion
in the development of the American Deaf community. In her new study,
Tracy Ann Morse effects a sharp course correction by delineating the
frequent use over time of religious rhetoric by members of the Deaf
community to preserve and support sign language.
In Chapter One, Morse analyzes
Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet’s use of religious references in his 1817
maiden address at the first American school for deaf students. She
examines his and other speeches as examples of the intersection of
education for deaf Americans and Protestant missionary efforts to
convert them. In the second chapter, she presents the different
religious perspectives of the two deaf education camps: Manualists
argued that sign language was a gift from God, while Oralists viewed
hand gestures as animal-like, indicative of lower evolutionary
development. Chapter Three explores the religious
rhetoric in churches, sanctuaries where sign language flourished and
deaf members formed relationships. In the fourth chapter, Morse shows
how Deaf activist George Veditz signed using religious themes in his
political films. She also comments on the impact of the bilingual
staging of Big River: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, which began
to change the hearing world’s opinion about the Deaf community.
Morse concludes with speculation on the shifting terrain for deaf
people due to technological innovations that might supplant religious
rhetoric as a tool to support the Deaf community.
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Religious Rhetoric and the Preservation of Sign Language
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781563686023
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter