Language in Hand
eBook - PDF

Language in Hand

Why Sign Came Before Speech

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eBook - PDF

Language in Hand

Why Sign Came Before Speech

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About This Book

In Language in Hand: Why Sign Came Before Speech, William C. Stokoe begins his exploration of the origin of human language with a 2400-year-old quote by Democritus: "Everything existing in the universe is the fruit of chance and necessity." Stokoe capitalizes upon this simple credo in this far-ranging examination of the scholarly topography to support his formula for the development of language in humans: gesture-to-language-to-speech. Intrinsic to this is the proposition that speech is sufficient for language, but not necessary. Chance brought human ancestors down from the trees to the ground, freeing their hands for gesture, and then sign language, a progression that came from the necessity to communicate.

Stokoe recounts in Language in Hand how inspiration grew out of his original discovery in the 1950s and '60s that deaf people who signed were using a true language with constructions that did not derive from spoken English. This erudite, highly engaging investigation calls upon decades of personal experience and published research to refute the recently entrenched principles that humans have a special, innate learning faculty for language and that speech equates with language. Integrating current findings in linguistics, semiotics, and anthropology, Stokoe fashions a closely-reasoned argument that suggests how our human ancestors' powers of observation and natural hand movements could have evolved into signed morphemes.

Stokoe also proposes how the primarily gestural expression of language with vocal support shifted to primarily vocal language with gestural accompaniment. When describing this transition, however, he never loses sight of the significance of humans in the natural world and the role of environmental stimuli in the development of language. Stokoe illustrates this contention with fascinating observations of small, contemporary ethnic groups such as the Assiniboin Nakotas, a Native American group from Montana that intermingle their spoken and signed languages depending upon cultural imperatives.

Language in Hand also presents innovative thoughts on classifiers in American Sign Language and their similarity to certain spoken languages, convincing evidence that speech originally copied sign language forms before developing unrelated conventions through usage. Stokoe concludes with a hypothesis on how the acceptance of sign language as the first language of humans could revolutionize the education of infants, both deaf and hearing, who, like early humans, have the full capacity for language without speech.

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Table of contents

  1. Contents
  2. Preface
  3. 1. An Idea that Would Not Go Away
  4. 2. Chasing the Language Butterfly
  5. 3. Guesture to Language to Speech
  6. 4. Signed Languages and Language Essentials
  7. 5. Language Signs
  8. 6. Descartes Thought Wrong
  9. 7. Language Metamorphosis
  10. 8. Language in a Chrysalis
  11. 9. Emergiing from the Cocoon
  12. 10. Families of Signed Languages
  13. 11. Languages in Parallel
  14. 12. Visible Verbs Become Spoken
  15. 13. A Difference that Makes a Difference
  16. Notes
  17. Bibliography
  18. Index