Graeme Clark: The Man Who Invented the Bionic Ear

Author: Mark Worthing
Publisher: Allen & Unwin Academic
Category: Biography: General, Biography: Science, Technology & Engineering, Audiology & Otology, Wave Mechanics (vibration & Acoustics), Inventions & Inventors, Biotechnology, Acoustic & Sound Engineering
Age Group: 15+
Book Format: Paperback

As a young man, Graeme Clark read about Louis Pasteur, Marie Curie and other great scientists, little knowing that one day he would join their ranks. After watching his father struggle with hearing problems, Graeme knew he wanted to find a solution to deafness. Graeme became a surgeon, and his quiet persistence and methodical approach yielded results that fulfilled his childhood dream. Around the world, hundreds of thousands of people have now received the gift of hearing from the cochlear implant he developed. The first major medical 'bionic' implant technology, it has transformed the everyday lives of people who are profoundly deaf. Throughout his career, his belief that the impossible could be achieved, his strong family support and his Christian faith have sustained him through many obstacles, and helped him overcome resistance to his ideas from people who doubted them. This new biography tells the inspiring story of Graeme's life, and the triumphs and the setbacks behind the invention of the bionic ear. 'I found Mark Worthing's story of Graeme Clark moving and inspiring. It captures the spirit of a truly amazing man who changed the life of our daughter and of many thousands of others in the world.' - Li Cunxin, author of Mao's Last Dancer 'An interesting and sometimes moving biography of a fascinating scientific pioneer who helped to bring hearing to the profoundly deaf.' - Sir Paul Nurse, President of the Royal Society and Nobel Laureate

Table Of Contents
Foreword by Li Cunxin
Introduction: An (extra)ordinary couple
1 Tears of joy
2 Childhood in Camden
3 'When I grow up, I'm going to fix ears'
4 Boarding school in Sydney
5 Brains, bones and exams
6 Student Christian Movement
7 Margaret
8 UK studies
9 Ship's surgeon and Cairo castaway
10 Resettling in Australia
11 Australia's youngest professor of medicine
12 Reginald Ansett and the Channel 10 telethons
13 Imagining the impossible
14 'That clown, Clark'
15 Assembling the team
16 The gold box
17 Life at Eltham and Kiama
18 Study leave in England 1975-76
19 A day at the beach
20 The race to code speech
21 1 August 1978: The birth of bionics
22 More surgeries and the first failures
23 The faith of a scientist
24 Federal funding at last
25 The bionic ear hits the market
26 Implants for children
27 Even children born deaf shall hear
28 The signing Deaf community
29 The Bionic Ear Institute and the future of bionics
30 Success and sadness at millennium's turn
31 'Retirement'
Epilogue: 'Professor Clark, that kiss belongs to you!'
Appendix 1: Recognitions and awards
Appendix 2: Scientific innovations
Appendix 3: Selected publications
Acknowledgements
Notes
Index
About Mark Worthing
Mark Worthing is a historian of science and a senior researcher with Lutheran Education Australia, Adelaide.

(BK-9781760113155)

SKU BK-9781760113155
Barcode # 9781760113155
Brand Allen & Unwin Academic
Artist / Author Mark Worthing
Shipping Weight 0.3600kg
Shipping Width 0.150m
Shipping Height 0.020m
Shipping Length 0.230m
Assembled Length 15.200m
Assembled Height 22.900m
Assembled Width 2.000m
Type Paperback

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