La communauté sourde de la Belle Epoque (1870-1920)
Author: Yann Cantin
Publisher: Archives & Culture, 2019
(translated from French by Google Translate)
Over the past forty years, sociological studies on minorities have multiplied. Deaf Studies bring a new look at the deaf, and above all a completely new angle of analysis on the question of deafness, that of the existence and development of a real community, which goes well beyond the simple hearing impairment.
The chronology usually used for these studies is based on four pivotal dates: 1759-1760, when the Abbé de l'Épée, initiator of free education for deaf children, structured the educational landscape for the deaf; 1834, which marks with Ferdinand Berthier the beginning of the militant deaf movement.
This second period, too idealized, called the Golden Age, runs from 1834 to 1880; 1880, from which the teaching of sign language disappears, dark period little studied 1970-2005, period known as the "deaf awakening", cultural revival of the deaf community. However, the absence of in-depth work on the Belle Époque prevents a detailed understanding of the transformations.
This book therefore studies this pivotal period between the emergence of the community and the era of struggles. It allows to better understand the evolutions of this community, its internal structure, its members, and what it left to later generations.




