Show simple item record

Files in this item

Cover for Gesture in Multiparty Interaction: A Study of Embodied Discourse in Spoken English and American Sign Language
dc.contributor.advisorHamilton, Heidien
dc.creatoren
dc.date.accessioned2013-09-12T16:27:30Zen
dc.date.available2013-09-12T16:27:30Zen
dc.date.created2013en
dc.date.issueden
dc.date.submitted01/01/2013en
dc.identifier.otherAPT-BAG: georgetown.edu.10822_559498.tar;APT-ETAG: 0c0512a7e0a4d4baab896ce473c95566en
dc.identifier.urien
dc.descriptionPh.D.en
dc.description.abstractThis dissertation is an examination of gesture in two game nights: one in spoken English between four hearing friends and another in American Sign Language between four Deaf friends. Analyses of gesture have shown there exists a complex integration of manual gestures with speech. Analyses of sign language have implicated the body as a medium capable of rendering symbolically complex structures that wax and wane linguistic. By incorporating a Peircean semiotic analysis of symbols (including spoken and sign language) in the tradition of interactional sociolinguistics, I analyze both spoken and sign discourses as situated engagements that effect and are affected by the embodied, composite utterances (Enfield 2009) contained within them.en
dc.description.abstractTo address simplified conceptualizations of gesture as a continuum of forms, I compare embodied utterances in an array of interactive environments, showing the flexibility and constraints of the gestural modality. When participants played the game, gesture took on full burden of communication and both hearing and deaf players continued to use their bodies in similar ways to structure the utterances as part of a discourse (cf. Bavelas 1994). When participants shifted tasks to setting up the game, they incorporated items from the physical surround into their composite utterances. As participants engaged across speech events they managed turns, marked stance, and conveyed propositions integrating manual and nonmanual forms to accomplish coherent discourses (Schiffrin 1987). I highlight gestural mimicry and gestural mirroring as instances of embodied repetition and two manual forms called the Open Hand Palm Up and Gun Handshape Palm Up as examples of corporal discourse markers.en
dc.description.abstractThese findings complicate theoretical treatments of gesture as points on a continuum. By reframing the discussion of gesture's relationship to language as fundamentally an issue of how people engage through their bodies, I argue a unified theory of gesture can incorporate both spoken and sign languages.en
dc.formatPDFen
dc.format.extent306 leavesen
dc.languageenen
dc.publisherGeorgetown Universityen
dc.sourceGeorgetown University-Graduate School of Arts & Sciencesen
dc.sourceLinguisticsen
dc.subjectAmerican Sign Languageen
dc.subjectDiscourseen
dc.subjectGestureen
dc.subjectMultiparty Interactionen
dc.subjectSemioticsen
dc.subject.lcshSociolinguisticsen
dc.subject.lcshLinguisticsen
dc.subject.otherSociolinguisticsen
dc.subject.otherLinguisticsen
dc.titleGesture in Multiparty Interaction: A Study of Embodied Discourse in Spoken English and American Sign Languageen
dc.typethesisen


This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record