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Paris in America
A Deaf Nanticoke Shoemaker and His Daughter

Clara Jean Mosley Hall
with Gayle Williamson

November 2018

Table of contents
Excerpt
Interview
Review
  $32.95 (t) paperback, ebook

The author is available for lectures and book signings. For more information, please contact jmhphd@yahoo.com.

 
View the author’s book trailer in ASL.   Clara Jean Mosley Hall discusses her new memoir.

Paris in America opens a door for deepening our understanding of the complexity of black and Native American (Nanticoke) history, and achieves this feat in a moving story of a daughter’s love for her deaf father. Clara Jean Mosley Hall’s memoir inspires even as it sensitizes us to the rich lives our country tends to marginalize.”

—Charles Johnson, National Book Award winner and Professor Emeritus, University of Washington

Paris in America contains the heartfelt truths of a family that was hardworking and faithful. They had each other and they pushed through any challenge with integrity. Dr. Mosley Hall puts into writing what many families of our Native and mixed community went through. What an inspiration!”

—Chief Natosha Norwood Carmine of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe

“As deaf of deaf, with both black and Cherokee roots, I was fascinated with Paris in America. This book has educated me to the core. Clara Jean Mosley Hall should be applauded for her extraordinarily personal account of her life and her relationship with her father.”

—CJ Jones, Producer, Director, Writer, and Actor, Sign World TV

“This is a compelling and unique story about a woman who was raised in an African American community by a single father, who was a deaf Native American. Her memoir describes their trials and tribulations, as well as the communication and love between them and their extended family. Her journey ultimately leads to her having her own family, a PhD, and a career dedicated to the deaf community.”

—Sterling Street, Museum Coordinator and Historian, Nanticoke Indian Museum

Clara Jean Mosley Hall has inhabited various cultural worlds in her life: Native American, African American, Deaf, and hearing. The hearing daughter of a Deaf Nanticoke man, who grew up in Dover, Delaware’s Black community in the 1950s and 60s, Hall describes the intersections of these identities in Paris in America. By sharing her father’s experiences and relating her own struggles and successes, Hall honors her father’s legacy of hard work and perseverance and reveals the complexities of her own unique background.

       Hall was abandoned by her Deaf African American mother at a young age and forged a close bond with her father, James Paris Mosley, who communicated with her in American Sign Language. Although his family was Native American, they—like many other Native Americans of that region—had assimilated over time into Dover’s Black community. Hall vividly recounts the social and cultural elements that shaped her, from Jim Crow to the forced integration of public schools, to JFK and Motown. As a Coda (child of deaf adults) in a time when no accessibility or interpreting services were available, she was her father’s sole means of communication with the hearing world, a heavy responsibility for a child. After her turbulent teenage years, and with the encouragement of her future husband, she attended college and discovered that her skills as a fluent ASL user were a valuable asset in the field of education.

       Hall went on to become a college professor, mentor, philanthropist, and advocate for Deaf students from diverse backgrounds. Her memoir is a celebration of her family, her faith, her journey, and her heritage.

Clara Jean Mosley Hall is a professor in the American Sign Language and Deaf Interpretive Services Program at Cuyahoga Community College in Parma, Ohio.

Paperback
ISBN 978-1-944838-35-5
234 pages. 6 x 9. 30 photographs.
$32.95 (t)

Ebook
ISBN 978-1-944838-36-2
$32.95