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Genie, The wild child.
The story begins in Los Angeles on November 4, 1970, when authorities
have taken under protection a thirteen-year-old girl that was kept in
such solitude imposed by her parents that she never even learned to
talk. The parents have been accused of child abuse.
Genie was imprisoned in a bedroom and bound to a potty chair
for the most of her early life. Fully kept under control, she was made
to sit alone every day and night. She had almost nothing to look at and
no one to talk to for more than a decade. The girl allegedly
was emitting immature noises and was still in diapers when social
workers found about the case, but the officials were anticipating she
may still possess a normal ability to learn.
The girl who gave an impression of an infant would be well known as
“Genie.” She was transported to Children’s Hospital in Los Angeles where
she instantly gained the affection of doctors and scientists. She was
delicate, lovely and poignant… and Genie was about to put on trial an
idea paramount to science and society: that caring, encouraging and
affectionate environment could make up for even the most brutal past.
Genie had an awkward walk and other almost non-human features. She
continuously spat, sniffed, and clawed. She hardly articulated anything
or produced any noises. Investigation showed that she was abused for
making noise and as a consequence, had learned, basically, not to
vocalize. And she really didn’t speak at all. She was mute most of the
time. (x)
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