On April 8, 1864, President Abraham Lincoln and the United States
Congress put into effect legislation authorizing the granting of
collegiate degrees by the Columbia Institution for the Instruction of
the Deaf and Dumb and the Blind. At this moment, what became Gallaudet
University began a century and a half of offering a collegiate liberal
arts education to deaf and hard of hearing students. Featuring more
than 250 photographs and illustrations, David F. Armstrong’s The
History of Gallaudet University: 150 Years of a Deaf American
Institution chronicles its development into a modern, comprehensive
American university. At first a tiny college of fewer than 200
students, Gallaudet’s growth paralleled the emergence of the
American Deaf Community and the history of the nation in general. In
the same way that the country’s land-grant universities brought
higher education to more American students than ever before, Gallaudet
offered the same opportunities to deaf students for the first time.
Gallaudet mirrored other institutions in addressing major issues of
the time, from legislated segregation to the Civil Rights movement
that inspired the struggle by deaf people to gain control of the
governance of their university. Most critically, this volume details
poignantly the evolution of American Sign Language as a language of
scholarship at Gallaudet during a time when its use in educational
institutions was largely discouraged or prohibited. Through story and
image, it traces the historic path that Gallaudet traveled to be
recognized as the finest institution of higher education for deaf
people in the world.
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150 Years of a Deaf American Institution
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781563685965
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Vendor
Gallaudet University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter