Word: deafness
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...with a married man, she says, "You don't pick who you fall in love with. There are so few people to love. It's hard for one adult to even like another. Almost impossible." No argument there. But what about Spencer Tracy's wife Louise, home with their deaf child. "We never lived together. He stayed in one house on George Cukor's estate, and I stayed in another nearby." Does that nicety of real estate explain why many members of the press came to romanticize her 27-year affair with Tracy? "I never talked to them. Never. They...
...concludes an ambitious project that the author began with The Radiant Way (1987) and continued in A Natural Curiosity (1989). Essentially, Drabble has been trying to counter the solipsistic bent of so much contemporary fiction, that wan parade of heroes and heroines talking to themselves -- usually about themselves -- and deaf to anything beyond the echoes of self-consciousness. Novels, particularly Victorian triple-deckers, once made room for the outside world, for the ways that history, politics, economics, etc., impinged on the lives of ordinary people. Are such narratives impossible now, or have most novelists simply quit paying attention to current...
Paglia's suggestion that our program is dominated and crippled by one discipline, namely French theory, should fall on deaf ears...
...Since I am a student at Harvard University, I feel I have the same right to attend a play as anyone else," Menchel said, with the help of a telephone service for the deaf...
...theater has instituted an infrared system which allows the mildly deaf to attend performances. But "the system is of no assistance to a profoundly deaf person like myself," Menchel said...