"Michele Friedners book is a gem-I cant think of anything else like it. Scaling from the pronunciation of 's' by a deaf American child who will someday become an ethnographer to Indian state partnerships with biotech corporations, we encounter many ways to be hearing and deaf. And we see this communicative abundance whittled away by repressive transnational infrastructures as well as local rules, tests, and disability bureaucracies. To my mind, Sensory Futures is the union of medical anthropology, STS, and disability studies at its finest."-Mara Mills, cofounder and codirector, NYU Center for Disability Studies
"Sensory Futures compels us to question what it means to live with disability as an ongoing process of becoming. Michele Friedner excels at describing the everyday demands of disability and normality in India. Engaging, insightful, and careful, this extraordinary book spotlights the reshaping of state power and technological promise through the everyday intimacies of multisensory life."-Harris Solomon, author of Lifelines: The Traffic of Trauma
"Friedner writes in a reader-friendly style, blending autoethnographic narrative and a review of multiple ethnographic case studies; describing medical and biotechnical literature; and describing Indian government special education mandates about deaf children."-CHOICE
"Sensory Futures provides a rich and comprehensive account of the journey of a cochlear implant from the supplier to the individual and tries to elaborate on the nature of communication, which needs to be understood as constantly in flux, messy, and, most importantly, multisensory."-Ethos Journal
"There is an authentic narrative to the stories that delve deep into the authors personal CI experiences, as well as those of medical professionals, parents, and children, paired powerfully with disability and deaf history."-H-Net Reviews