Helen Keller would not be bound by conditions. Rendered deaf and blind at 19 months by scarlet fever, she learned to read (in several languages) and even speak, eventually graduating with honors from Radcliffe College in 1904, where as a student she wrote The Story of My Life. That she accomplished all of this in an age when few women attended college and the disabled were often relegated to the background, spoken of only in hushed tones, is remarkable. But Keller's many other achievements are impressive by any standard: she authored 13 books, wrote countless articles, and devoted her life to social reform. An active and effective suffragist, pacifist, and socialist (the latter association earned her an FBI file), she lectured on behalf of disabled people everywhere. She also helped start several foundations that continue to improve the lives of the deaf and blind around the world.
El libro que reúne la esencia del pensamiento de la mujer más extraordinaria del siglo XX.
Marcada desde su más tierna infancia por la ceguera y la sordera totales, Helen Keller fue capaz de superar, con la abnegada y paciente ayuda de la maestra Anne Sullivan, todos los obstáculos...
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