The Race for Rehabilitation: Sign-Mime, the National Theatre of the Deaf, and Cold War Internationalism

Author:

McKelvey Patrick

Abstract

In 1967, the US Vocational Rehabilitation Administration (VRA) awarded $331,000 to the Eugene O'Neill Memorial Theatre Foundation to fund a new company, the National Theatre of the Deaf. Endowing such an enterprise was bold, but not entirely unprecedented for this federal agency tasked with restoring disabled Americans to productive employment. Founded in 1920, the federal–state vocational rehabilitation program, or VR, ascended to institutional and ideological prominence during World War II and maintained this position well into the 1960s and beyond. VR distinguished itself not only through positing competitive employment as the solution to disabled Americans’ dependence on the state, but the specific means through which it would restore the disabled to productivity: the multidisciplinary expertise of physicians, psychologists, physical therapists, and rehabilitation counselors who collectively sought to render rehabilitants employable through a series of therapeutic interventions. Whereas disability activists focused on combatting the structural barriers disabled workers experienced in the labor market, “rehabilitationists” emphasized the imperative for disabled people to acclimate to existing work environments through individual physical and psychological transformation.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Visual Arts and Performing Arts

Reference10 articles.

1. Building the tower of Babel: International Sign, linguistic commensuration, and moral orientation

2. The Moscow Theater of the Deaf;Polyanovksy;American Annals of the Deaf,1938

3. For Bernard Bragg, the World's a Stage. . .;Denis;Deaf American,1977

4. Deaf Heritage

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