Analysis Of Malcolm Gladwell´s Outliers: The Radical Vision Of Helen Keller

2377 Words10 Pages

In 1880, in a small town named Tuscumbia in northwestern Alabama, Kate Adams and Arthur Keller welcomed their firstborn daughter into the world. After many discussions regarding her name, they decided to land on Helen Adams Keller. Helen was a bright and energetic baby, and she developed rapidly; she was walking by age one. Though by nineteen months, Helen’s life would change forever; Helen would become a deafblind mute. Despite being disconnected from the world surrounding her, Helen Keller became one of the most famous women of her age and a symbol of being stronger than your setbacks. Many believe that success is a random occurrence in a person's life, but it not, success is created. Malcolm Gladwell's book, Outliers, discusses many reasons …show more content…

Again and again, Helen's disadvantage is her disability, but her disability is also her opportunity. In a journal article, “The Radical Vision of Helen Keller,” Frederick Giffin writes on Helen's stance on politics. On top of being an author, Helen was an advocate, and from 1909 to 1921, Helen raised funds for the American Foundation for the Blind and participated in the American radical movement (Giffin 270). Helen gained fame solely because of her accomplishments despite being deafblind. Because of her fame, she had such an influence on her political views. If she did not learn to talk or write, she wouldn't be successful in raising funds for the American Foundation for the Blind. For her whole life, her setback, her disadvantage, was her disabilities; but because she became famous, her voice was listened to because she was an influential …show more content…

The growth mindset allowed Helen to obtain as much knowledge as she could. In Helen's book My Religion, she delves into her relationship with John Hitz, Helen's spiritual godfather. The two were close. Mr. Hitz would suggest that Helen put herself in situations with people with sight and hearing and unite their senses together so she could enjoy the world through them (Keller 44). Helen could live her life with the help of Annie Sullivan; Annie was Helen's ears, voice, and eyes. However, for Helen to grow, she needed to become more adaptable to the environments around her. She needed to apply herself to groups of fully abled people because she could live in a growth mindset by challenging herself to leave her comfort zone. Helen needed to thrive in a difficult situation where no one could be her eyes, voice, or

More about Analysis Of Malcolm Gladwell´s Outliers: The Radical Vision Of Helen Keller