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A Man Without Words New Ed Edition

22 customer reviews
ISBN-13: 978-0520202658
ISBN-10: 0520202651
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Comment: Previous owners name written inside the back cover. Light spotting on top page edges. It has some writing/and or highlighting. The cover and pages have some minor wear, but otherwise the book is great. 100% Money Back Guarantee. Shipped to Thousands of happy customers. FAST SHIPPING! Ships direct from Amazon. Free shipping on orders over $49! Tracking number provided with every order.
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 210 pages
  • Publisher: University of California Press; New Ed edition (August 29, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0520202651
  • ISBN-13: 978-0520202658
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 0.3 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (22 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #631,297 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

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Excellent book.
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37 of 41 people found the following review helpful By Daniel H. Bigelow VINE VOICE on January 27, 2003
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Like a lot of university educated folks, I heard in Psych 101 that once you hit your teens, your capacity to learn languages takes such a nosedive that if you haven't learned by then, you'll never be better than "Me Tarzan, you Jane" no matter how hard you try. I'm not ashamed of accepting this "language expiration date" -- there was no reason not to, and besides, it tracked with my own frustration learning foreign languages. For decades, I accepted this Psych 101 nugget without question.
When I started reading A Man Without Words, I had no idea my old Psych 101 nugget's days were numbered. I heard about the book as something a fan of Oliver Sacks would enjoy, and I associated it with Oliver Sack's book The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, about neurological dysfunction, not Sacks's Hearing Voices, about the deaf. I assumed until I started reading that the "man without words" was aphasic -- had brain damage that prevented him from understanding language. Turns out, though, the book's namesake is deaf and poor and had simply, at 27, never been taught any language. No one had ever bothered. Susan Schaller then proceeded to overturn the Psych 101 sacred cow I never knew I had by describing how she taught this young man the beginnings of ASL over the course of a few weeks. Then, so I couldn't think of him as a freak or fraud, Schaller goes on to show that many deaf people receive no language training and can also be taught to sign long after the Psych 101 "language expiration date."
Schaller claims that almost every deaf teacher, and most hearing teachers, of ASL know of adults who have grown up without language.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
Everyone including teachers and specialists could benefit from reading this book and learning more about a diverse population such as deafness. It shared how in poor countries when a deaf person can not access the proper education and help for his/her issue, the person grows up with the facilities to communicate with anyone. Very sad existence. With her perseverance as a teacher, she changed the man's life and opened up new opportunities/
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful By K. L Sadler VINE VOICE on March 3, 2002
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
I've read many of the previous case studies of languagelessness in children. We studied Genie and the Wild Boy of Aveyron in an education class on language and it's place in education. This was my introduction to this particular group of disenfranchised, neglected, and abused people...except I thought it was all children usually discovered in late childhood (around age 13). From my neuroscience classes I remember being taught that the brain continues neuronal growth (to targeted synapses in the brain) until about age ten, then begins to cut back. This was supposedly an explanation for why language learning is so difficult later in life. So coming across this book, with its story concerning adults with no obvious psychiatric problems (just a physical difference in lacking hearing) who had managed to survive to adulthood with no language, came as a complete surprise.
This book got put aside as I had to read other books for school and work, but I picked it up again and finished it. Schaller basically is providing a qualitative study, a case study, to draw attention to this apparent problem. This method of educational research is used more and more in writing dissertations, and I actually didn't recognize what it was until I took a qualitative research class myself. The writing and book tend at first to repeat itself. I am not sure what Schaller was doing in writing this way. Perhaps the book had to be a certain length or she felt readers might not pay attention to the seriousness of this problem for Ildefonso and other adults without language. This repetition caused the first half of the book to drag a bit.
After I picked the book up again, I finished it in two days.
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Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
This was fascinating read for me, because I knew the man. The writing could have been presented in a more interesting manner. I learned a great deal about deaf people who have their own language.
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A bit sensationalist and colorful rather than fully factual but an interesting read. Apparently the real Ildefonso was not "without words" as Schaller asserts. He was simply without formal sign language. Which is an enormous and life-changing step certainly worth recording.
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By Amazon Customer on December 18, 2013
Format: Paperback Verified Purchase
I had heard about this book on Radio Lab and it was a topic that intrigued me so I had to pick it up. It revealed a deeper understanding of the cultural world of the deaf community. There is rarely a week I don't think about this story. Though I often wanted to know more then the author provided I was always hungry for more as I read. My family was also intrigued by the story and often kept them up to date on the progress. With one reader it truly effected an entire family. Definitely recommended!
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By pooch weebolts on September 10, 2014
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Great read about a truly remarkable human interaction.
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