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Seeing Voices: A Journey into the World of the Deaf

Author: Oliver W. Sacks
Publisher: Harper Audio
Category: Book

List Price: $15.95
Buy Used: $14.00
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 17 reviews
Sales Rank: 1653927

Media: Audio Cassette
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 6.9 x 4.5 x 0.7

ISBN: 1559942770
Dewey Decimal Number: 301
EAN: 9781559942775
ASIN: 1559942770

Publication Date: September 1990
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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Oliver Sacks turns his attention to the subject of deafness, and the results is a beautiful, moving book that not only takes readers into the unfathomable world of the deaf, but offers a dee ply felt portraits of a minority struggle for recognition and respect.


Customer Reviews:   Read 12 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars "Better Understanding of the Deaf" by Sean Lynch   October 20, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Oliver Sacks composed this work because he became highly intrigued by the deaf after reading the paper "When the Mind Hears: A History of the Deaf" by Harlan Lane. Similarly, it is hard not to be both intrigued and impressed by the deaf population after reading Sacks' work "Seeing Voices". The focus of this book is on those in the human population who were born deaf or became deaf at an early age, and thus had to learn to communicate with the world without the power of spoken language.

The book is divided into three parts. The first section of the book introduces the deaf population and the definition of being Deaf. Sacks also explains how he became interested in learning about the deaf. Considering that Sacks has no prior connections to any deaf people, his curiosity for learning is impressive. The second section makes up the bulk of the book. In this section, Sacks describes his interactions with several patients, including Joseph and Charlotte, two deaf children who were raised differently by their parents. Sacks also discusses the neural background of being deaf, and makes several comparisons and contrasts between the deaf brain and the speaking brain. In the final section of the book, Sacks tells the story of the "Deaf Revolution" at Gallaudet College in 1988. In this revolution, deaf students rebel against the school administration and succeed in having a deaf member of the faculty named as president of the university. This section focuses mainly on deaf rights.

Sacks interacts with several patients on his journey of learning, and finds many contrasts between the abilities of deaf children. Joseph, born deaf, was treated like many deaf children in our society: he was unable to learn sign language and was forced to struggle with English and lip-reading at an early age. When Sacks talks to Joseph, he discovers that it is impossible to have a dialogue with Joseph, and that he "found it impossible to ask Joseph a question" (p.45). Joseph does poorly in school and is not able to function in our society. On the other hand, Charlotte, also born deaf, was diagnosed with deafness as an infant. Her parents, realizing that their daughter would never be able to hear their own spoken language, quickly took up learning a basic sign language. They would continue to learn more complicated sign languages as Charlotte grew, and continued to teach their daughter everything that they were learning about Sign. Because of this, Charlotte developed as normally as any speaking child. She is highly animated and very expressive. She is able to communicate with others, both the deaf and the speaking, easily because she was given the opportunity to develop her linguistic ability in a language that she is a natural: Sign language. Charlotte's case shows that often, deaf people are seen as "dumb" because speaking people force them to try to learn our language, which is not natural for them. They fall behind in the world. These cases also show that "one cannot acquire language by oneself" (p. 49), and thus they need help from one who already knows language. Also, it shows that Sign language is the natural language for deaf people, just as spoken language is the natural language for speaking people. Sacks confirms this through studies of the deaf brain, in comparison to the speaking brain, later in the book.

From these and other patient interactions, Sacks then dives into a study of the neural influences of the deaf. He discovered, through sifting through many studies, that the brains of deaf people were shown to show plasticity; that is, they reorganized themselves to adjust to the lack of speaking language. In these brains the areas that are responsible for language weren't not used, instead they were activated for visual stimuli. Since signers have a higher awareness of visual stimuli, signing is natural for them to learn. "Signers show the same cerebral lateralization as speakers, even though signing is entirely visuospatial in nature" (p.75). This discovery confirms that signing IS a language . Also,"the fact that Sign is based in the left hemisphere, despite its spatial organization, suggests that there is a representation of `linguistic' space in the brain" (p.76). This linguistic space must be reared correctly however, at a child's young age, when learning is very critical to their development. This marks the significant difference between Charlotte and Joseph, the two child patients discussed earlier.

In conclusion, Sacks wants the reader to know that the deaf strive to not be seen as "deaf and dumb". They have their own schools, colleges, and language (sign, in various forms) and can be highly intelligent if reared correctly. I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I would recommend it to anyone interested in learning about the deaf as well as anyone interested in neural plasticity. I especially enjoyed hearing the stories of the deaf patients and deaf schools. I was not previously aware that deaf schools even existed! I believe that many of us are ignorant of the situation of the deaf, and Oliver Sack's book is a good place to start our understanding of them.



2 out of 5 stars Not my favorite   July 7, 2008
I loved some of his other books like "The Man Who Mistook His Wife For A Hat" and his autobiography so this was a dissappointment. I didn't even finish it, not rivited to the page as I was by other books.


2 out of 5 stars Struggling to read!   June 14, 2007
 2 out of 5 found this review helpful

This book is extremely difficult to wade through as there are an endless amount of footnotes and one feels as if they will never get to the "real" story. There is, however, a lot of valuable historical information about deafness and the obstacles the deaf population has had to endure. Many times during the reading of this book, I was struck with the awareness that I hadn't even considered certain aspects of living in a hearing world as a deaf person that seemed obvious upon reading them. The book is enlightening but a struggle to read.


5 out of 5 stars Life-affirming, life-changing, must-read!   April 16, 2006
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

Stop whatever you're doing and read this right now. More than any of Sachs' wonderful books, it changes the way you perceive. A feast of ideas, a beautiful tribute to the genius of sign language, and a slap in the face for the hearing majority, who for so long have assumed that to hear is to fully understand. Not just a book; Seeing Voices is an essential experience.


5 out of 5 stars "...the deaf have something to teach us."   February 5, 2005
 26 out of 26 found this review helpful

In this extraordinary study, Dr. Sacks gives the general reader a penetrating insight into the world of the deaf. In his acclaimed "The Man Who Mistook his Wife for a Hat", as a practicing neurologist, he brought his readers into the bizarre world of terrible brain related illnesses, presenting twenty-four cases of individuals afflicted with such diseases as agnosia or prosopagnosia, where "normal" reality is turned inside out, and how some of these diseases are treated and how the patients cope with their condition. In "Seeing Voices", he permits us entry into the silent, at times strange, though culturally rich world of the congenitally and pre-lingually deaf.

As someone who has had no previous experience or knowledge in this area, for me this text opened a whole new area of culture and history that is continually growing and developing.

Sacks' explores the nature of language, touching upon Noam Chomsky's paradigm-shifting studies, "Syntactic Structures", "Cartesian Linguistics" and Language of Mind", where he proposes his theory that language is innate, lying dormant until it is made active through human interaction and culture. Sacks connects these theories to the pre-lingual deaf and its implications and manifestations.

We are also given a history lesson on the language of SIGN, how it has developed, why it was jettisoned, out of ignorant prejudice, in the late nineteenth century, and its miraculous come back in the twentieth century. Through Sacks' concise and straightforward prose, he connects us to the foreign world of another language not depended on speech, its intricacies and its wonder, and how those of us who have the ability to hear and to verbalize, all too often take language for granted. He also makes clear the sophistication of Sign as a form of legitimate communication, its grammatical foundations and its many nuances, and how, in some ways, it is a superior form of active exchange between people.

In chapter three, Sacks tells us about the cultural breakthrough at Gallaudet University in March 1988, where after massive student protest, the school literally closed down, the first ever deaf president of the university was appointed. Sacks witnessed this social changing event first hand, which in the end affected him more than he realized,

"I had to see this all for myself before I could be moved from my previous "medical" view of deafness (as a condition, a deficit, that had to be "treated") to a "cultural" view of the deaf as forming a community with a complete language and culture of its own." (P.129-30)

Indeed this entire text has changed my view that deafness is not simply a condition or human deficit, but another way of being in the world. In fact the deaf, with their shared language are forming a world community and culture crossing all barriers. And as Dr. Sacks points out, in this way, "...the deaf have something to teach us." (P. 167)




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