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1. "They Were Just Like Everyone Else" 2. The History of Martha's Vineyard 3. The Origins of Vineyard Deafness 4. The Genetics of Vineyard Deafness 5. The Island Adaptation to Deafness 6. Growing Up Deaf on the Vineyard 7. Deafness in Historical Perspective 8. "Those People Weren't Handicapped" Appendix A. Oral and Written Sources Appendix B. Perceived Causes of Vineyard Deafness Notes Bibliography Index
Nora Ellen Groce is a medical anthropologist working in the field of global health and international development. She holds the Cheshire Chair and is Director of the International Disability Research Centre in the Department of Epidemiology and Health Care at University College London.
Beautiful and fascinating… I was so moved by Groce’s book that the
moment I finished it I jumped in the car, with only a toothbrush, a
tape recorder, and a camera—I had to see this enchanted island for
myself.
*New York Review of Books*
Fascinating… Groce accomplishes much just by pointing out that
‘handicaps’ are something a culture creates, and thus the joint
responsibility of us all. That’s what places this book squarely
within the best tradition of anthropological writing, and makes it
both moving and encouraging.
*Village Voice*
Brilliantly argued and lively… [Groce’s] information consists of
the oral history she herself garnered from some 50 witnesses,
almost all more than 75 years old, and the documents in print and
in manuscript that cross-check and extend their first-hand
accounts. Human genetic theory, ethnographic counterparts and a
clear-eyed account of social attitudes are the analytic tools that
form her brief and telling work… [A] persuasive and compassionate
investigation.
*Scientific American*
It must become essential reading for all concerned with the
psychosocial aspects of deafness and for anyone interested in the
history of hearing problems. Furthermore, for anyone with a serious
interest in the hearing impaired and their problems it will make
fascinating and valuable reading… The most readable of books.
*British Journal of Audiology*
[Groce] illuminates and challenges the assumption that
discrimination has existed always and everywhere. [She] has made a
major contribution to our understanding of deafness, disability and
handicap as socially meaningful, dynamic categories.
*Qualitative Sociology*
When is deafness neither handicap nor stigma? When, as this
remarkable book recounts, the entire hearing community learns from
childhood to be bilingual in conventional speech and sign language,
and when the deaf are wholly integrated into the community’s
social, economic, religious, and recreational life… A vivid
ethnography of a hearing community’s full acceptance of, and
adaptation to, deafness. Groce also constructs a fascinating
ethnohistory of this genetic disorder.
*Choice*
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