TY - JOUR
T1 - Language as description, indication, and depiction
AU - Ferrara, Lindsay
AU - Hodge, Gabrielle
N1 - Documentation and early development of the Auslan and Australian English archive and corpus was supported by an Australian Research Council grant DP140102124 to Trevor Johnston, Adam Schembri, Kearsy Cormier, and Onno Crasborn. Additional corpus enrichment was supported by an ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language 2016 Language Documentation grant to GH. We are grateful to the Auslan signers and Australian English speakers who contributed to the archive, and the research assistants (Stephanie Linder and Sally Bowman) who worked to create it. The Norwegian Sign Language example used here comes from a pilot corpus project undertaken in 2015. We thank the Norwegian signers who participated in this project and graciously shared their language.
PY - 2018/5
Y1 - 2018/5
N2 - Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiotemporal context of their face-to-face interactions (Parmentier, 1994; Clark, 1996; Johnston, 1996; Kendon, 2004). Varied semiotic repertoires combine in different ways, the details of which are rooted in the interactions occurring in a specific time and place (Goodwin, 2000; Kusters et al., 2017). However, intense focus in linguistics on conventionalized symbolic form/meaning pairings (especially those which are arbitrary) has obscured the importance of other semiotics in face-to-face communication. A consequence is that the communicative practices resulting from diverse ways of being (e.g., deaf, hearing) are not easily united into a global theoretical framework. Here we promote a theory of language that accounts for how diverse humans coordinate their semiotic repertoires in face-to-face communication, bringing together evidence from anthropology, semiotics, gesture studies and linguistics. Our aim is to facilitate direct comparison of different communicative ecologies. We build on Clark's (1996) theory of language use as 'actioned' via three methods of signaling: describing, indicating, and depicting. Each method is fundamentally different to the other, and they can be used alone or in combination with others during the joint creation of multimodal 'composite utterances' (Enfield, 2009). We argue that a theory of language must be able to account for all three methods of signaling as they manifest within and across composite utterances. From this perspective, language-and not only language use-can be viewed as intentionally communicative action involving the specific range of semiotic resources available in situated human interactions.
AB - Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiotemporal context of their face-to-face interactions (Parmentier, 1994; Clark, 1996; Johnston, 1996; Kendon, 2004). Varied semiotic repertoires combine in different ways, the details of which are rooted in the interactions occurring in a specific time and place (Goodwin, 2000; Kusters et al., 2017). However, intense focus in linguistics on conventionalized symbolic form/meaning pairings (especially those which are arbitrary) has obscured the importance of other semiotics in face-to-face communication. A consequence is that the communicative practices resulting from diverse ways of being (e.g., deaf, hearing) are not easily united into a global theoretical framework. Here we promote a theory of language that accounts for how diverse humans coordinate their semiotic repertoires in face-to-face communication, bringing together evidence from anthropology, semiotics, gesture studies and linguistics. Our aim is to facilitate direct comparison of different communicative ecologies. We build on Clark's (1996) theory of language use as 'actioned' via three methods of signaling: describing, indicating, and depicting. Each method is fundamentally different to the other, and they can be used alone or in combination with others during the joint creation of multimodal 'composite utterances' (Enfield, 2009). We argue that a theory of language must be able to account for all three methods of signaling as they manifest within and across composite utterances. From this perspective, language-and not only language use-can be viewed as intentionally communicative action involving the specific range of semiotic resources available in situated human interactions.
KW - depiction
KW - indexicality
KW - language
KW - multimodal
KW - semiotics
KW - sign language
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85047426702
U2 - 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00716
DO - 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00716
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85047426702
SN - 1664-1078
VL - 9
JO - Frontiers in Psychology
JF - Frontiers in Psychology
M1 - 716
ER -