Dictionnaire biographique des grands sourds en France
This is the first biographical and genealogical dictionary devoted to the history of the deaf. At the crossroads between the history of medicine, education, families and general history, the latter has only recently become a field of university research.
There are of course many works on the educational history of the deaf, born of the debates of the 18th and 19th centuries between oralism and gesturalism. But biographies and family stories have been appearing for only twenty years - timidly, moreover.
All the personalities presented here, more or less known, have in common to have had an impact on the social life and the emancipation of the deaf.
The book shows the complex relationships they were able to maintain with their peers and the decisive weight they were able to play for the community. These men and women are brought together and presented according to a temporal breakdown built around tipping points, particularly around the relationship to sign language.
The authors also reintroduce here the term noétomalalien, which Henri Gaillard had created in 1889 to replace the old terms of gestualism or mimic language. The biographies developed thus constitute historical landmarks allowing a better understanding of deaf history, but also to continue to explore it, thanks to the archives and works mentioned.