★ 08/07/2023
DeafBlind poet Clark (How to Communicate) serves up passionate meditations on the DeafBlind Protactile movement—which he suggests is characterized by a focus on establishing greater autonomy for DeafBlind people and “throw out many norms and values imposed by sighted society,” such as taboos against touching others. In “Always Be Connected,” Clark traces the movement’s origins to a 2007 shortage of sighted ASL interpreters in Seattle that prompted DeafBlind community leaders to hold meetings without them, organically producing new means of communication. Clark notes that ASL posed difficulties for DeafBlind people, who would listen by placing their hands over a speaker’s hands as they signed despite only 30% of ASL being decipherable by touch, so when the Seattle DeafBlind community decided to forge ahead without interpreters, they developed an ASL offshoot, called Protactile, that uses intricate systems of touch to communicate. Clark’s bracing perspectives are sure to stimulate, as in “Against Access,” where he argues that many so-called accessibility measures aim to replicate the experience of sighted people at the expense of usability, such as video transcripts that open with overly detailed image descriptions, which, for Clark, only serve as obstacles to reading the more substantial parts of the video. Lucid and incisive, this is not to be missed. (Oct.)
"John Lee Clark’s fervent manifesto for the Protactile language and movement will blow your mind, enliven your body, and connect you to other people in unexpected ways. Touch the Future is a book that enlarges the human world."
"Protactile leads the way in this exquisite book that invites us into the curious and joyful crafting of choreographies of encounter.… This is not a book to hold at a distance. This is a book that teaches us how to get into the tangle, knee against knee, hand enthusiastically tapping the thigh, to feel the world differently."
"[A] lively, inviting collection.... [John Lee Clark is] able to draw a sharp distinction between different kinds of living, speaking fluently to those of us who experience the full use of our eyes and ears without thinking about it."
"An absolutely pathbreaking collection of essays.… [John Lee] Clark places himself in an intellectual tradition of his forebearers, and finds meaning in the stylistic minutia of how one’s identity is rendered on the page."
"John Lee Clark is equal parts master storyteller, wry comedian, erudite historian, and brilliant teacher.... At times urgent, often hilarious, and always illuminating, Touch the Future will touch readers’ hearts while opening their minds to a whole new world."
"John Lee Clark’s essays radiate with excitement and urgency. Tenderly documenting the emerging social movement of Protactile, they call upon us all to think about distance, power, and access in much bolder ways. To read Clark is not simply to be taught something by him, but to find yourself immersed and seeking alongside him—you don’t just learn, you come away changed."
"Through John Lee Clark’s writing, we witness the emergence of a new language, new sensibilities, new art forms, new forms of embodiment and sociality—nothing less than a new mode of existence. Clark’s eloquent writing brings to voice one of the most significant cultural movements of our time."
"Touch the Future opens doors to the multiple worlds of disability.… This is a book for anyone who is interested in the life of the imagination and the mind."
2023-08-01
A Deaf-Blind poet and teacher tells his story with fervor and wisdom.
As a young boy living with Usher syndrome, which affects both hearing and vision, Clark, author of the poetry collection How To Communicate, met his hero in his parents’ basement. A family friend, Leslie, who was a Deaf-Blind activist and beloved community member, opened the door for him to one day write this book. With Leslie’s charisma and talent for storytelling, he was an excellent instructor to the world of Protactile learning, which uses touch and signing to communicate and navigate. “To say [Protactile] is a movement Deaf-Blind people are leading isn’t wrong,” writes the author. “To say it’s a new language enlisting tactile properties never before used in human communication is to state a fact. To say it’s reinventing everything isn’t hyperbole.” In these compelling essays, Clark warmly welcomes us into this “new world,” and his charm graces nearly every page. The author is a character in his own essays, weaving fables and legends together with undeniable craft. Funny, angry, and heroic, Clark is an amiable guide as he takes us through discourse on issues such as inclusivity, translators, government policy, and education, as well as theater, architecture, and art. One of the author’s grievances is “distantism,” which “privileges the distance senses of sight and hearing to the exclusion of other ways of being in the world.” At the same time, he writes, “touch is considered disposable. Our governments have never been good with multiple nuanced solutions. They always go for One Answer. We also live in a society that’s very comfortable with leaving people behind.” Throughout this lively journey, Clark, like Leslie before him, relishes his ability to tell tales, break rules, and possibly change the world.
An epic and riotous book. Ignore it, and you might get left behind.