Deafness Archives - Oliver Sacks | Official Website of Author, Neurologist & Foundation https://www.oliversacks.com/tag/deafness/ Oliver Sacks was a physician, best-selling author, professor of neurology, and founder of the Oliver Sacks Foundation. Sun, 02 Jun 2024 06:37:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 Seeing Voices https://www.oliversacks.com/oliver-sacks-books/seeing-voices/ Sun, 20 Mar 2022 16:56:46 +0000 https://www.oliversacks.com/?post_type=oliver-sacks-books&p=2183 "This book will shake your preconceptions about the deaf, about language and about thought. Sacks [is] one of the finest and most thoughtful writers of our time." — Los Angeles Times Book Review Seeing Voices “I had never thought about what it might [...]

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“This book will shake your preconceptions about the deaf, about language and about thought. Sacks [is] one of the finest and most thoughtful writers of our time.”

Los Angeles Times Book Review

Seeing Voices

“I had never thought about what it might mean to be deaf, to be deprived of language, or to have a remarkable language (and community and culture) of one’s own. Up to this point, I had mostly thought and written about the problems of individuals–here I was to encounter an entire community.” —Oliver Sacks

With Seeing Voices, Dr. Sacks launches on a journey into the world of the deaf, which he explores with the same passion and insight that have illuminated other human conditions for his readers everywhere.

Seeing Voices begins with the history of deaf people in the United States, the often outrageous ways in which they have been seen and treated in the past, and their continuing struggle for acceptance in a hearing world. And it examines the amazing and beautiful visual language of the deaf–Sign–which has only in the past decade been recognized fully as a language–linguistically complete, rich, and as expressive as any spoken language.

The existence of this unique alternative mode of language, writes Dr. Sacks, has wide-ranging implications for those in the hearing world as well, for it “shows us that much of what is distinctly human in us–our capacities for language, for thought, for communication, and culture–do not develop automatically in us, are not just biological functions, but are, equally, social and historical in origin; that they are a gift–the most wonderful of gifts–from one generation to another….The existence of a visual language, Sign, and of the striking enhancements of perception and visual intelligence that go with its acquisition, shows us that the brain is rich in potentials we would scarcely have guessed of, shows us the almost unlimited resource of the human organism when it is faced with the new and must adapt.”

Sign is not only a language but the very medium of deaf culture. It stands at the center of the extraordinary social and political movement for deaf rights, which gained international attention with the uprising of deaf students at Gallaudet University in March 1988. In Part III of Seeing Voices, Dr. Sacks gives an eyewitness account of the revolt, and the students who organized it, and considers its impact on a new generation of deaf children.

Seeing Voices is a fascinating voyage into a strange and wonderful land, and along the way Oliver Sacks ponders the nature of talking and teaching, child development, the development and functioning of the nervous system, the formation of communities, worlds, and cultures, and the interface of language, biology, and culture.

Oliver Sacks as pictured on the cover of Seeing Voices

📷 Dr. Sacks, as featured on the back cover of Seeing Voices.

Praise for Seeing Voices

“A remarkable book, penetrating, subtle, persuasive….[It] will likely become a classic.” — Keith W. Spoeneman, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

“One cannot read more than a few pages of Sacks without seeing something in a new way. His breadth of understanding and expression seem limitless….His subject matter is compelling, and his writing is powerful in its understatement.” — Lee Dembart, Kansas City Star

“Sacks is a profoundly wise observer…. Seeing Voices is fascinating and richly rewarding.” — Andrea Barrett, Cleveland Plain Dealer

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The Mind’s Eye https://www.oliversacks.com/oliver-sacks-books/the-minds-eye/ Sun, 20 Mar 2022 13:39:55 +0000 https://www.oliversacks.com/?post_type=oliver-sacks-books&p=2164 “Extraordinary. . . . An elegant mixture of case history and street-level observations of the struggles of those afflicted with visual disorders.” — San Francisco Chronicle The Mind’s Eye "The effects of a profound perceptual deprivation such as blindness may cast an [...]

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“Extraordinary. . . . An elegant mixture of case history and street-level observations of the struggles of those afflicted with visual disorders.”

San Francisco Chronicle

The Mind’s Eye

“The effects of a profound perceptual deprivation such as blindness may cast an unexpected light on these questions. Going blind, especially later in life, presents one with a huge, potentially overwhelming challenge: to find a new way of living, of ordering one’s world, when the old has been destroyed.” Oliver Sacks

In The Mind’s Eye, Oliver Sacks tells the stories of people who are able to navigate the world and communicate with others despite losing what many of us consider indispensable senses and abilities: the power of speech, the capacity to recognize faces, the sense of three-dimensional space, the ability to read, the sense of sight.  For all of these people, the challenge is to adapt to a radically new way of being in the world.

Oliver Sacks with magnifying glass

📷 The ever-curious Oliver Sacks involved in one of his usual activities—investigation. Photo by Bill Hayes

Praise for The Mind’s Eye

“Is there anyone who’s done more to elucidate the ability in disability than Oliver Sacks?. . . . In Sacks’ world, even with great loss there are fascinating compensations.” People

“Another masterpiece of phenomenological description by our most gifted and humane chronicler of neurological disorders. . . . Sacks effortlessly blends his teaching of neurology with the most sensitive descriptions of the ways in which our individual brains yield the most extraordinary variety of human experience.” New Scientist

“Frank and moving. . . . His books resonate because they reveal as much about the force of character as they do about neurology.” Nature

“Rich with the sort of observation and insight that makes Sacks’s writing satisfying. . . . Sacks shows us knowledge, discipline, and imagination confronting the terrors of illness and loss. . . . Readers may never take the view of a sunrise or of their child’s smile the same way again.” Boston Globe

“Elaborate and gorgeously detailed. . . . Again and again, Sacks invites readers to imagine their way into minds unlike their own, encouraging a radical form of empathy.” Los Angeles Times
 

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The Island of the Colorblind https://www.oliversacks.com/oliver-sacks-books/the-island-of-the-colorblind/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 21:43:30 +0000 https://www.oliversacks.com/?post_type=oliver-sacks-books&p=2028 “Sack’s total immersion in island life makes this luminous, beautifully written report a wondrous voyage of discovery." — The New York Times Book Review The Island Of The Colorblind “Here, as in Seeing Voices, I was concerned not only with individuals, but with [...]

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“Sack’s total immersion in island life makes this luminous, beautifully written report a wondrous voyage of discovery.”

The New York Times Book Review

The Island Of The Colorblind

“Here, as in Seeing Voices, I was concerned not only with individuals, but with whole populations; thus, I felt as much an anthropologist as a doctor when seeing the impact on the chammoros of a terrible neurodegenerative disease in Guam, and of a hereditory total color-blindness in the tiny coral atol of Pingelap. But these two little books often broke away from the purely medical, and became journals of travel and enchantment in the tropical islands.” —Oliver Sacks

Oliver Sacks has always been fascinated by islands–their remoteness, their mystery, above all the unique forms of life they harbor. For him, islands conjure up equally the romance of Melville and Stevenson, the adventure of Magellan and Cook, and the scientific wonder of Darwin and Wallace.

Drawn to the tiny Pacific atoll of Pingelap by intriguing reports of an isolated community of islanders born totally colorblind, Dr. Sacks finds himself setting up a clinic in a one-room island dispensary, where he listens to these achromatopic islanders describe their colorless world in rich terms of pattern and tone, luminance and shadow. And on Guam, where he goes to investigate the puzzling neurodegenerative paralysis endemic there for a century, he becomes, for a brief time, an island neurologist, making house calls with his colleague John Steele, amid crowing cockerels, cycad jungles, and the remains of a colonial culture.

The islands reawaken Sacks’ lifelong passion for botany–in particular, for the primitive cycad trees, whose existence dates back to the Paleozoic–and the cycads are the starting point for an intensely personal reflection on the meaning of islands, the dissemination of species, the genesis of disease, and the nature of deep geologic time. Out of an unexpected journey, Sacks has woven an unforgettable narrative which immerses us in the romance of island life, and shares his own compelling vision of the complexities of being human.

Pingelap by Sanne de Wilde

📷 Photo by Sanne De Wilde, Noor. The Belgian photographer's 'Island of the Colorblind' exhibition documented the achromats of Pingelap and the neighboring island of Pohnpei.

Praise for Island of the Colorblind

“A book of beguiling beauty.” Los Angeles Times Book Review

“An explorer of that most wonderous of islands, the human brain… Oliver Sacks also loves the oceanic kind of islands… Both kinds figure movingly in this book–part travelogue, part autobiography, part medical mystery story–in which Sacks’s journeys to a tiny Pacific atoll and the island of Guam become explorations of the time, and the complexities of being human.” D.M. Thomas, The New York Times Book Review

“As a travel writer, Sacks ranks with Paul Theroux and Bruce Chatwin. As an investigator of the mind’s mysteries, he is in a class by himself.” —Publishers Weekly

“Dr. Sacks conjures up his subjects’ lives with enormous compassion and insight, writing simultanteously as a doctor and metaphysician, scientist and father confessor.” The New Yorker

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