Description

Book Synopsis

During the Rubella Syndrome epidemic of the 1960s, many children were born deaf, blind, and mentally disabled. David Goode has devoted his life and career to understanding such people's world, a world without words, but not, the author confirms, one without communication. This book is the result of his studies of two children with congenital deaf-blindness and mental retardation.

Goode spent countless hours observing, teaching, and playing with Christina, who had been institutionalized since age six, and Bianca, who remained in the care of her parents. He also observed the girls' parents, school, and medical environments, exploring the unique communication practices—sometimes so subtle they are imperceptible to outsiders—that family and health care workers create to facilitate innumerable every day situations. A World Without Words presents moving and convincing evidence that human beings both with and without formal language can understand and communicate with each other in many ways.

Through various experiments in such unconventional forms of communication as playing guitar, mimicking, and body movements like jumping, swinging, and rocking, Goode established an understanding of these children on their own terms. He discovered a spectrum of non-formal language through which these children create their own set of symbols within their own reality, and accommodate and maximize the sensory resources they do have. Ultimately, he suggests, it is impractical to attempt to interpret these children's behaviors using ideas about normal behavior of the hearing and seeing world.



Trade Review
"David Goode's work is unique and his thinking original and deep. It is some of the best in the sociology of disability." --Robert Bogdan, Syracuse University

Table of Contents
Contents

Foreword – Irving Kenneth Zola

Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. A World Without Words
3. On Understanding Without Words
4. Reflections on the Possibility of Understanding Without Formal Language
5. Construction and Use of Data in Social Science Research
6. Kids, Culture, and Innocents
7. Conclusions
Appendix: Ascertaining Choice with Alingual, Deaf-Blind, and Retarded Clients
Notes
References
Index

A World without Words: The Social Construction of

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    A Paperback / softback by David Goode

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      View other formats and editions of A World without Words: The Social Construction of by David Goode

      Publisher: Temple University Press,U.S.
      Publication Date: 29/06/1994
      ISBN13: 9781566392167, 978-1566392167
      ISBN10: 1566392160

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      During the Rubella Syndrome epidemic of the 1960s, many children were born deaf, blind, and mentally disabled. David Goode has devoted his life and career to understanding such people's world, a world without words, but not, the author confirms, one without communication. This book is the result of his studies of two children with congenital deaf-blindness and mental retardation.

      Goode spent countless hours observing, teaching, and playing with Christina, who had been institutionalized since age six, and Bianca, who remained in the care of her parents. He also observed the girls' parents, school, and medical environments, exploring the unique communication practices—sometimes so subtle they are imperceptible to outsiders—that family and health care workers create to facilitate innumerable every day situations. A World Without Words presents moving and convincing evidence that human beings both with and without formal language can understand and communicate with each other in many ways.

      Through various experiments in such unconventional forms of communication as playing guitar, mimicking, and body movements like jumping, swinging, and rocking, Goode established an understanding of these children on their own terms. He discovered a spectrum of non-formal language through which these children create their own set of symbols within their own reality, and accommodate and maximize the sensory resources they do have. Ultimately, he suggests, it is impractical to attempt to interpret these children's behaviors using ideas about normal behavior of the hearing and seeing world.



      Trade Review
      "David Goode's work is unique and his thinking original and deep. It is some of the best in the sociology of disability." --Robert Bogdan, Syracuse University

      Table of Contents
      Contents

      Foreword – Irving Kenneth Zola

      Acknowledgments
      1. Introduction
      2. A World Without Words
      3. On Understanding Without Words
      4. Reflections on the Possibility of Understanding Without Formal Language
      5. Construction and Use of Data in Social Science Research
      6. Kids, Culture, and Innocents
      7. Conclusions
      Appendix: Ascertaining Choice with Alingual, Deaf-Blind, and Retarded Clients
      Notes
      References
      Index

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