Helen Keller and the Burden of Wonder

Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 67 (4):588-594 (2024)
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Abstract

This essay examines the concept of “wonder” in relation to the life of deafblind author and activist Helen Keller (1880–1968), who was often billed in popular media as the “Eighth Wonder of the World.” For Keller, being known as a “wonder” was not always a positive attribute: the term, far from being neutral, conceals the uneven power dynamic between the one doing the wondering and the one who inspires the wonder. Using excerpts from a range of sources—from Keller’s second autobiography _The World I Live in_ (1908) to hotelier Conrad Hilton’s autobiography _Be My Guest_ (1957)—the author argues that Keller was never a passive object of other people’s wonder but a proactive agent of her own wonder-making. In the end, Keller endured the burden of being known as the “Eighth Wonder” while also resisting its cumulative effects.

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