98: Sarah Marsh (A Sign Of Her Own)
Description
Charlie and Sarah Marsh (A Sign Of Her Own) discuss the lesser-known aspect of Alexander Bell's work - teaching deaf children to speak - in terms of both the real history and the fictionalised character she created in order to explore the events. This includes snippets about the manufactured rivalry between the two inventors of the telephone; Bell's wife, Mabel Hubbard (who was deaf); the Deaf community in London in the late 1800s; and the way Sarah employs language - written, signed, spoken - to excellent effect.
A transcript is available on my site
General references:
Wikipedia's page on Bell and Elisha Grey's rivalry
Books mentioned by name or extensively:
Reuben Conrad: Deaf School Child
Sarah Marsh: A Sign Of Her Own
Release details: recorded 1st December 2023; published 27th May 2024
Where to find Sarah online: Twitter || Instagram
Where to find Charlie online: Website || Twitter || Instagram || TikTok
Discussions
01:55 The inspiration for A Sign Of Her Own
03:27 Alexander Bell's work with deaf children, 'Visible Speech', and the reality of it all
07:08 The Deaf community in London at the time
08:13 The locations - America and London
09:21 The characters, particularly Sarah's fictional heroine, Ellen, and where bird names as surnames come into it
11:49 Talking about Mabel Hubbard, Alexander Bell's wife, who was deaf
13:24 The rivalry between Alexander Bell and Elisha Grey
15:30 The way Sarah uses different languages in her book
18:57 The romance in the book, between Ellen and Frank
20:48 Where Sarah sees Ellen going in her life beyond the book
22:34 Brief notes on what Sarah's writing now
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