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ISBN: HB: 9781563683558

Gallaudet University Press

November 2007

272 pp.

22.8x15.2 cm

1 table, 20 photos

HB:
£48,00
QTY:

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Spanish National Deaf School

Portraits from the Nineteenth Century

In nineteenth-century Spain, the education of deaf students took shape through various contradictory philosophies and practices. Susan Plann depicts this ambivalence by profiling a select group of teachers and students in her detailed history "The Spanish National Deaf School: Portraits from the Nineteenth Century". Plann s subjects reveal the political, financial, and identity issues that dominated the operation of the National School for Deaf-Mutes and the Blind in Madrid from 1805 to 1899. Roberto Francisco Pradez y Gautier, the first deaf teacher in Spain, taught art from 1805-1836; he also was the last deaf teacher for the next 50 years. Juan Manuel Ballesteros, the hearing director from 1835 to 1868, enacted an ableist policy that barred deaf professors. At the same time, another hearing teacher, Francisco Fernandez Villabrille, wrote the first Spanish Sign Language dictionary. In the 1870s, two deaf students, Manuel Tinoco and Patricio Garcia, resisted the physical abuse they received and set the stage for the growth of a Deaf identity that opposed the deprecating medical model of deafness. Marcelina Ruiz Ricote y Fernandez a hearing female teacher who taught from 1869 to 1897, combated the school s sexist polices. "The Spanish National Deaf School" concludes with Martin de Martin y Ruiz, the most famous deaf-blind student from the Madrid school. Through these portraits, Plann has brought life to the major issues that defined education in nineteenth-century Spain, themes that have influenced the status of deaf Spaniards today.