Sounds like home : growing up Black and deaf in the South / Mary Herring Wright
- Author
- Wright, Mary Herring, 1924-2018
- Published
- Washington, DC : Gallaudet University Press, [2019]
- Edition
- 20th anniversary edition.
- Physical Description
- 1 online resource
Access Online
- Contents
- A bouquet of roses -- The beginning -- Iron mine school days -- More childhood memories -- Scary times -- Make me a child again -- A new kind of life -- The nightmare begins -- The train ride to a new world -- Home!! -- Queen of the fairies -- The old and the new -- Changes, worries, and adventures -- Coming of age -- Boys and other trouble -- More changes and a difficult decision -- Accepted at last -- Graduation -- From student to teacher -- Good-bye, school days! Hello, world! -- Epilogue.
- Summary
- "Originally published in 1999, Sounds Like Home adds an important dimension to the canon of deaf literature by presenting the perspective of an African American deaf woman who attended a segregated deaf school. Mary Herring Wright documents her life from the mid-1920s to the early 1940s, offering a rich account of her home life in rural North Carolina and her education at the North Carolina School for the Deaf and Blind, which had a separate campus for African American students. This 20th anniversary edition of Wright's story includes a new introduction by scholars Joseph Hill and Carolyn McCaskill, who note that the historical documents and photographs of segregated Black deaf schools have mostly been lost. Sounds Like Home serves "as a permanent witness to the lives of Black Deaf people.""--Ebscohost viewed June 3, 2020.
- Subject(s)
- Genre(s)
- ISBN
- 9781944838591 (electronic bk.)
1944838597 (electronic bk.)
9781944838584 paperback alkaline paper - Note
- Revised edition of the author's Sounds like home, c1999.
- Bibliography Note
- Includes bibliographical references.
View MARC record | catkey: 43148731