Preservation of the Sign Language

0h 14m
30
Ratings / Reviews: 0.0 (0) Rate

George Veditz, one-time president of the National Association of the Deaf of the United States, outlines the right of deaf people to sign instead of speak.

Storyline
George William Veditz gives an eleven-minute speech in this silent movie. It's entirely in Sign Language. Veditz was born to German emigrant parents in 1861. He lost his hearing at the age of eight and was enrolled in a school for the deaf. Over the course of his life (he died in 1937), he became an instructor in Sign Language at the Colorado School for the Deaf and President of the National Association of the Deaf. With the rise of motion pictures, silent until the middle of the 1920s, he pushed forward a proposal to make this film in support of Sign Language, which he felt was threatened by the oralist movement in education. This movie was added to the National Film registry in 2010, While it, like many of the films on the Registry, have been added more for their political value than artstic merit as cinema, this is a worthy addition.
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Other Details

Release Dates:

Country of origin: United States , United States

Language: None, American Sign Language

Technical specs

Color Format

Color: color

Color: color

Financial

Budget: USD

Revenue Worldwide

Currency: USD

Currency: USD

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