The Wild Boy of Aveyron

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 1976 - Education - 351 pages

The discovery of Victor, the wild boy of Aveyron, and the accomplishments of his teacher, Jean Marc Itard, launched a debate among philosophers anthropologists, psychologists, and educators that has lasted almost two centuries, has given birth to educational treatment of the mentally retarded with methods that are still widely employed, and has led in this country to a revolution in childhood education.

This beautifully written book by Harlan Lane tells the complete story of Dr. Itard's successes and failures with "l'enfant sauvage," a story immortalized by director Fran ois Truffaut in The Wild Child (L'Enfant sauvage). Lane takes the reader into the central philosophical and scientific debates of the nineteenth century and sheds new light on questions that persist for our own time. Which human activities require social instruction and which do not? Is there a critical period for language acquisition? To what extent can education compensate for delayed development and limited endowment? What are the critical features of effective training methods?

 

Contents

I
1
IV
31
V
49
VIII
71
IX
97
XI
131
XII
161
XIII
183
XIV
205
XVI
255
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1976)

Harlan Lane is the Matthews Distinguished University Professor at Northeastern University in Boston, Massachusetts, in the United States. He specializes in research on speech production and perception in hearing and deaf people and on the culture, history and manual language of the deaf world.

Bibliographic information