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Language and Gesture


Language and Gesture

Hardback by McNeill, David (University of Chicago)

Language and Gesture

£46.00

eBook available - save £3.01
ISBN:
9780521771665
Publication Date:
3 Aug 2000
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
420 pages
Format:
Hardback
For delivery:
New product available - 9780521777612
Language and Gesture

Description

This landmark study examines the role of gestures in relation to speech and thought. Leading scholars, including psychologists, linguists and anthropologists, offer state-of-the-art analyses to demonstrate that gestures are not merely an embellishment of speech but are integral parts of language itself. Language and Gesture offers a wide range of theoretical approaches, with emphasis not simply on behavioural descriptions but also on the underlying processes. The book has strong cross-linguistic and cross-cultural components, examining gestures by speakers of Mayan, Australian, East Asian as well as English and other European languages. The content is diverse including chapters on gestures during aphasia and severe stuttering, the first emergence of speech-gesture combinations of children, and a section on sign language. In a rapidly growing field of study this volume opens up the agenda for research into a new approach to understanding language, thought and society.

Contents

Introduction David McNeill; Part I. Gesture in Action: 1. Pointing, gesture spaces, and mental maps John Haviland; 2. Language and gesture: Unity or duality? Adam Kendon; 3. Verbal and gestural expressions of space in socio-spatial context: The integration of space, spatial modality and spatial context Asli Özyürek; 4. Gestures that count Charles Goodwin; 5. Gestural interaction between the instructor and the learner in origami instruction Nobuhiro Furuyama; 6. Gestures, knowledge, and the world Curtis Le Baron and Jurgen Streeck; Part II. Gesture in Language: 7. Growth points in thinking-for-speaking David McNeill and Susan D. Duncan; 8. How representational gestures help speaking Sotaro Kita; 9. When do most spontaneous representational gestures actually occur with respect to speech? Shuichi Nobe; 10. The disruption of gesture by stuttering: insights into the nature of the gesture-speech integration Rachel I. Mayberry and Joselynne Jaques; 11. A multichannel view of communication: the grounding of language comprehension in perception Elena Levy and Carol Fowler; 12. Gesture and the transition from one-to two-word speech: when hand and mouth come together Cynthia Butcher and Susan Goldin-Meadow; Part III. Modeling Gesture Performance: 13. Lexical gestures and lexical access: a process model Robert M. Krauss, Yihsiu Chen and Rebecca F. Gottesman; 14. The production of gesture and speech Jan Peter de Ruiter; 15. Catchments and contexts: non-modular factors in speech and gesture production David McNeill; Part IV. From Gesture to Sign: 16. Blended spaces and deixis in sign language discourse Scott Liddell; 17. Gestural precursors to linguistic constructs: how input shapes the form of language Jill Morford and Judy Kegl; 18. Gesture to sign (language) William C. Stokoe.

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