Most scholarly speculation on the origin of human language has
centered around speech. However, the growing understanding of sign
languages on human development has transformed the debate on language
evolution. David F. Armstrong’s new book Show of Hands: A Natural
History of Sign Language casts a wide net in history and geography to
explain how these visible languages have enriched human culture in
general and how their study has expanded knowledge of the human
condition. Armstrong addresses the major theories of language
evolution, including Noam Chomsky’s thesis of an innate human
“organ” for language and Steven Pinker’s contention that there
is language and not-language without any gradations between gesture
and language. This engrossing survey proceeds with William C.
Stokoe’s revival of the early anthropological cognitive-linguistic
model of gradual development through the iconicity of sign languages.
Armstrong ranges far to reveal the nature of sign languages, from the
anatomy of early human ancestors to telling passages by Shakespeare,
Dickens, and Pound, to the astute observations of Socrates, Lucretius,
and Abbé de l’Epée on sign communication among deaf people. Show
of Hands illustrates the remarkable development of sign languages in
isolated Bedouin communities and among Australian indigenous peoples.
It also explores the ubiquitous benefits of “Deaf Gain” and visual
communication as they dovetail with the Internet and its mushrooming
potential for the future.
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A Natural History of Sign Language
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781563684876
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Vendor
Gallaudet University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter