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My Sense of Silence: Memoirs of a Childhood with Deafness (Creative Nonfiction Series)
Lennard J. Davis

Issue #0

My Sense of Silence: Memoirs of a Childhood with Deafness (Creative Nonfiction Series)

University of Illinois Press (Nov 24, 1999)
10006290
| Hardcover
176 pages | 145 x 216 mm | USA | English
Dewey 306.874092
LC Classification HQ759.912 .D38 2000

Genre

  • Deaf Studies

Subject

  • Children Of Deaf Parents
  • Children Of Deaf Parents/ United States/ Biography
  • Deaf Parents/ United States/ Biography
  • Deaf/ Family Relationships/ United States/ Case Studies
  • United States

Plot

He remembers lying awake at night, every muscle rigidly alert, listening for intruders. He remembers frantically hammering on the door while his mother's oblivious footsteps passed back and forth inside. He remembers acting as a go-between in the marketplace, the doctor's office, the parent-teacher conference, the synagogue, the post office: a liaison between sound and silence.Lennard J. Davis grew up as the hearing child of deaf parents. In this candid, affecting, and often funny memoir, he recalls the joys and confusions of this special world, especially his complex and sometimes difficult relationships with his working-class Jewish immigrant parents. Growing up in a crowded one-bedroom South Bronx tenement, Lennard felt himself "a hearing outsider" caught between two worlds. Davis recounts childhood loneliness and fear, adolescent frustration compounded by embarrassment at his parents' deafness, and intellectual aspirations that ran counter to their compliant stoicism. He vividly describes his father's devotion to race walking and to televised baseball games, a trip to England with his mother on the Queen Elizabeth, and his successful efforts to relocate his family to a better apartment. He also recounts his problematic relationship with his elder brother, whom he both idolized and feared, and his college years at Columbia University, where (to his parents' chagrin) he participated in the historic campus demonstrations of May 1968. In a moving epilogue, Davis tells of his adult involvement with CODA (Children of Deaf Adults) and of coming to terms with a surprising realization. "Though I was hearing," he says, "deafness was in me." Gracefully slipping through memory, regret, longing, and redemption,My Sense of Silenceis an eloquent remembrance of human ties and human failings.

Personal

Owner Deaf Heritage Centre
Location Book Shelf 5 Red
Index 111
Added Date Jan 08, 2015 16:08:18
Modified Date Jun 26, 2017 14:52:04