Description
Book SynopsisDespite her disabilities, Helen Keller worked tirelessly for human rights and other political issues.
Trade ReviewNielsen has compiled an outstanding collection, including many letters and photos that are being published for the first time. And even if you didn't grow up in Alabama, you may still marvel about how a little girl from Tuscumbia not only beat the odds but also blazed trails. * Dallas Morning News *
The book's compactness, straightforward writing style, and revolutionary approach make The Radical Lives of Helen Keller invaluable for both teachers and scholars. Keller would be delighted that Nielsen allowed her her Scotch. * Journal of American History *
If you have not read Kim Nielsen's The Radical Lifes of Helen Keller, then I highly recommend it. As a person who has labored through numerous thick volumes on the life of this remarkable deaf-blind woman, I am delighted with Nielsen's concise and refreshing scholarly work. She examines Keller's life from a Disability Studies perspective. The book is enjoyable and easy to read, and it captures Keller's political dimension with great detail, based on such additional-and sometimes chilling-sources as military intelligence and FBI files. Nielsen does great justice to both the subject of her book and to Disability Studies as an emerging field. * Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education *
As a person who has labored through numerous thick volumes on the life of this remarkable deaf-blind woman, I am delighted with Nielsen’s concise and refreshing scholarly work. * Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education *
Radical Lives fills out an important dimension of our cultural memory of the adult Helen Keller. * Ms. Magazine *
Stunning final chapter. * The Yale Review *
The Radical Lives of Helen Keller thus is an important, essential guide for any who would receive a well-rounded survey of her life. * The Midwest Book Review *
Nielsen's book gives us a Helen Keller for our times. We meet a complex person whose politics defy our reductionist knowledge about her, whose lived experience makes for compelling reading. The Radical Lives of Helen Keller renders three-dimensional, perhaps for the first time, a figure who all too often is known to the world, but known in minimalist flatness merely as a symbol of overcoming disability. Nielsen shows us that there is so much more to Kellera political activist, theorist, and intellectual with unconventional, and, yes, even uncomfortable, opinions. She forthrightly explores these contradictions, in lucid, readable prose, to allow a very real version of Helen Keller to emerge from the darkness. -- Lennard J. Davis,author of Bending Over Backwards: Essays on Disability and the Body
Constitutes an important contribution to both the bibliography on Helen Keller and the advancement of disability studies. . . . Nielsen draws on a diverse and revealing body of source materials to give shape and dimension to key topics and arguments. . . . Nielsen does a particularly effective job of giving voice to Keller by drawing on letters, writings, and the statements of others; the direct quotes from Keller that she includesand there are a multitudeenliven the text and strengthen the reader’s sense of Keller as an intellectual and a person as well as of the times which she lived. This sophisticated use of sources and quotes yields a strong, riveting narrative. * Sign Language Studies *
Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Timeline Introduction 1 I Do Not Like This World As It Is: 1900-1924 2 The Call of the Sightless: 1924-1937 3 Manna in My Desert Places: 1937-1948 4 I Will Not Allow Polly to Climb a Pyramid: 1948-1968 5 One of the Least Free People on Earth: The Making and Remaking of Helen Keller Notes Bibliography Index About the Author