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A Silent Minority: Deaf Education in Spain, 1550-1835 | 
enlarge | Author: Susan Plann Publisher: University of California Press Category: Book
List Price: $45.00 Buy New: $0.30 You Save: $44.70 (99%)
New (13) Used (21) from $0.30
Sales Rank: 1535026
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 343 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.6 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.3 x 1.2
ISBN: 0520204719 Dewey Decimal Number: 305.9081620946 EAN: 9780520204713 ASIN: 0520204719
Publication Date: September 30, 1997 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Book and Cover in Excellent Condition
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Product Description This timely, important, and frequently dramatic story takes place in Spain, for the simple reason that Spain is where language was first systematically taught to the deaf. Instruction is thought to have begun in the mid-sixteenth century in Spanish monastic communities, where the monks under vows of silence employed a well-established system of signed communications. Early in the 1600s, deaf education entered the domain of private tutors, laymen with no use for manual signs who advocated oral instruction for their pupils. Deaf children were taught to speak and lip-read, and this form of deaf education, which has been the subject of controversy ever since, spread from Spain throughout the world. Plann shows how changing conceptions of deafness and language constantly influenced deaf instruction. Nineteenth-century advances brought new opportunities for deaf students, but at the end of what she calls the preprofessional era of deaf education, deaf people were disempowered because they were barred from the teaching profession. The Spanish deaf community to this day shows the effects of the exclusion of deaf teachers for the deaf. The questions raised by Plann's narrative extend well beyond the history of deaf education in Spain: they apply to other minority communities and deaf cultures around the world. At issue are the place of minority communities within the larger society and, ultimately, our tolerance for human diversity and cultural pluralism.
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