Deaf American Prose - 1980-2010 by Kristen Harmon

Deaf American Prose - 1980-2010 by Kristen Harmon

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Deaf American Prose - 1980-2010 by Kristen Harmon

In Deaf life, the personal narrative holds sway because most Deaf individuals recall their formative years as solitary struggles to understand and to be understood. Few deaf people in the past related their stories in written form, relying instead on a different kind of "oral" tradition, that of American Sign Language. During the last several decades, however, a burgeoning bilingual deaf experience has ignited an explosion of Deaf writing that has pushed the potential of ASL-influenced English to extraordinary creative heights. Deaf American Prose: 1980-2010 presents a diverse cross-section of stories, essays, memoirs, and novel excerpts by a remarkable cadre of Deaf writers that mines this rich, bilingual environment.

       The works in Deaf American Prose frame the Deaf narrative in myriad forms: Tom Willard sends up hearing patronization in his wicked satire "What Exactly Am I Supposed to Overcome?" Terry Galloway injects humor in "Words," her take on the identity issues of being hard of hearing rather than deaf or hearing. Other contributors relate familiar stories about familiar trials, such as Tonya Stremlau's account of raising twins, and Joseph Santini's short story of the impact on Deaf and hearing in-laws of the death of a son. The conflicts are well-known and heartfelt, but with wrinkles directly derived from the Deaf perspective.

       Several of the contributors expand the Deaf affect through ASL glosses and visual/spatial elements. Sara Stallard emulates ASL on paper through its syntax and glosses, and by eliminating English elements, a technique used in dialogue by Kristen Ringman and others. Deaf American Prose features the work of other well-known contemporary Deaf writers, including co-editor Kristen Harmon, Christopher Jon Heuer, Raymond Luczak, and Willy Conley. The rising Deaf writers presented here further distinguish the first volume in this new series by thinking in terms of what they can bring to English, not what English can bring to them.

Jennifer L. Nelson is Professor of English at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC.

Kristen Harmon is Professor of English at Gallaudet University in Washington, DC.


SKU Unavailable
ISBN 13 9781563685231
ISBN 10 156368523X
Title Deaf American Prose - 1980-2010
Author Kristen Harmon
Condition Unavailable
Binding Type Paperback
Publisher Gallaudet University Press,U.S.
Year published 2012-04-30
Number of pages 336
Cover note Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.