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This remarkable volume examines the process by which three deaf,
French biographers from the 19th and 20th centuries attempted to
cross the cultural divide between deaf and hearing worlds through
their work. The very different approach taken by each writer sheds
light on determining at what point an individual's assimilation
into society endanger his or her sense of personal identity.
Author Hartig begins by assessing the publications of
Jean-Ferdinand Berthier (1803-1886). Berthier wrote about Auguste
Bebian, Abbe de l'Epee, and Abbe Sicard, all of whom taught at the
National Institute for the Deaf in Paris. Although Berthier
presented compelling portraits of their entire lives, he paid
special attention to their political and social activism, his main
interest.
Yvonne Pitrois (1880-1937) pursued her particular interest in the
lives of deaf-blind people. Her biography of Helen Keller focused
on her subject's destiny in conjunction with her unique
relationship with Anne Sullivan. Corinne Rocheleau-Rouleau
(1881-1963) recounted the historical circumstances that led
French-Canadian pioneer women to leave France. The true value of
her work resides in her portraits of these pioneer women: maternal
women, warriors, religious women, with an emphasis on their lives
and the choices they made.
"Crossing the Divide" reveals clearly the passion these biographers
shared for narrating the lives of those they viewed as heroes of an
emerging French deaf community. All three used the genre of
biography not only as a means of external exploration but also as a
way to plumb their innermost selves and to resolve ambivalence
about their own deafness.
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