Seeing Voices
 

Seeing Voices (Vintage)

by Oliver Sacks

"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

Like The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat, this is a fascinating voyage into a strange and wonderful land, a provocative meditation on communication, biology, adaptation, and culture.  In... (read more)

Top tags: psychologynonfictionneurologylanguagecommunication (all tags)

 

Member Reviews

  • amecke
    • Rated 0 stars

    Oliver Sacks focuses on the history of Deaf Culture in America and the neuroscience of language acquisition. Among the most important details he discusses: infants (hearing or Deaf) can learn to sign at six months; even hearing babies raised around sign language will "babble" with their fingers same way they do vocally; the ability to learn sign is contained in the sections of our brains which handle any language not sight. Raised among fluent signers, any Deaf person can become completely fluent in a native sign language. American Sign Language differs as much from other sign languages as English diffes from spoken foreign languages.

    amecke wrote this review Thursday, September 20 2007. ( reply | permalink )
  • emilysk
    • Rated 3 stars

    This book really didn't do much for me. I've read several of Sacks' other books and found them fascinating, but in "Seeing Voices" Sacks seemed so enamored with ASL (American Sign Language) that other facets of Deafness as culture, experience, or disability were virtually ignored. The one aspect of the book I did find scientifically interesting was Sacks' observation that many of the Deaf people he studied who use ASL, a language that has a spatial dimension that spoken language cannot, have a much better sense of spatial relations than their English-speaking counterparts. This appeared to signify that the ASL-speakers' brains had changed to accomdate a spatial sense that spoken-word-users brains may not use or possess.

    Other than that, I thought this book was kind of repetitive and not that interesting, and also cut out the validity of the experience of Deaf people who choose to read lips, speak, use Signed Exact English, or use hearing aids or cochlear implants. Sure, ASL is neat, but it's not the only choice the deaf have for communicating.

    emilysk wrote this review Thursday, August 30 2007. ( reply | permalink )
© 2008 Tastemakers, Inc. | Portions of Shelfari.com are Copyright © 1996-2008 Amazon.com, Inc. or its affiliates. Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Copyright Policy