By Jean F. Andrews
CHOICE is a publication which reviews books for academic settings. This book appeared in the April 2013 issue of CHOICE.
Fiction helps readers know and understand cultures other than their own in more empathetic and compassionate ways than informational nonfiction can’t accomplish. This anthology does just that. Edna Sayers (Professor of English at Gallaudet Univ.) gathered 32 short stories published from 1729 to 2009 that feature deaf characters. Through clever plotting and character creation, the authors of these stories reveal attitudes of hearing people toward sign language, the challenges and limitations of lip-reading, the difficulty of understanding deaf speech, and the infantilization of deaf people.
Sayers notes that the only story in this anthology that advocates for signing is Joanne Greenberg‘s And Sarah Laughed. Sayers also offers writers a useful formula for what she calls a “nonexploitative treatment” of deaf characters in literature: there are at least two deaf characters in a story, these deaf characters converse with each other, and their topic of conversation is about something other than being deaf or the deaf community. This stimulating compilation of short stories with deaf characters will endear, enlighten, provoke, and amuse all readers. This book is highly recommended for undergraduates and graduate students; professionals; general readers.
Jean F. Andrews is a Reading Specialist and Professor of Deaf Studies/Deaf Education at Lamar University.
Related articles
- Two Quick Stories (deafinprison.wordpress.com)
- Your Money or Your Life (deafinprison.wordpress.com)
- Deaf Driving Illegal? (brokenrulesmagazine.com)
- Deaf News: Capturing Deaf culture in BSL – Deaf Heritage website launched today (limpingchicken.com)
- Deaf Mother Hears Sound for the First Time with Hearing Implant (laughingsquid.com)