The Other King’s Speech: Elocution and the Politics of Disability in Georgian Britain

This essay examines the role that vocal disability played in eighteenth-century political discourse surrounding the exercise of governmental power by looking closely at two stutterers on opposite ends of the political and social spectra – King George III and the radical orator and elocutionist John...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Eighteenth century (Lubbock) 2018-09, Vol.59 (3), p.279-304
1. Verfasser: Richman, Jared S.
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description This essay examines the role that vocal disability played in eighteenth-century political discourse surrounding the exercise of governmental power by looking closely at two stutterers on opposite ends of the political and social spectra – King George III and the radical orator and elocutionist John Thelwall. Using contemporary disability theory as a critical frame, the essay explores the ways in which disabled elocution emerged in late Georgian Britain to become a politically significant motif as evidenced by a range of works of written and visual satire. By their very materiality within a print medium, I argue, these works mark and render visible disabled bodies otherwise transparent as the ephemeral entity of speech becomes codified in print. Broadly speaking, then, the essay argues that speech—perfected, deformed, repressed, enabled, and disabled—served to codify British systems of political authority and social oppression even as they seemed to clear a space for political resistance. By focusing on the manner in which the era’s representations of and reactions to disabled speech instantiated a system of compulsory fluency, this essay demonstrates how disability operated as a governing trope in Georgian-era debates over government sovereignty, political access, national identity, and freedom of expression.
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identifier ISSN: 0193-5380
ispartof The Eighteenth century (Lubbock), 2018-09, Vol.59 (3), p.279-304
issn 0193-5380
1935-0201
1935-0201
language eng
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source Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects 18th century
Debates
Disability
Fluency
George III, King of Great Britain (1738-1820)
Historical text analysis
Kings
Literary canon
National identity
Oppression
Political discourse
Political power
Political representation
Politics
Power
Public life
Sovereignty
Speaking
Speech
Speech disorders
Speech therapy
Stuttering
Subjectivity
Thelwall, John (1764-1834)
title The Other King’s Speech: Elocution and the Politics of Disability in Georgian Britain
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