TY - JOUR
T1 - Pointing to the body
T2 - Kin signs in Australian Indigenous sign languages
AU - Green, Jennifer
AU - Bauer, Anastasia
AU - Gaby, Alice
AU - Ellis, Elizabeth Marrkilyi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© John Benjamins Publishing Company
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - Kinship plays a central role in organizing interaction and other social behaviors in Indigenous Australia. The spoken lexicon of kinship has been the target of extensive consideration by anthropologists and linguists alike. Less well explored, however, are the kin categories expressed through sign languages (notwithstanding the pioneering work of Adam Kendon). This paper examines the relational categories codified by the kin signs of four language-speaking groups from different parts of the Australian continent: the Anmatyerr from Central Australia; the Yolŋu from North East Arnhem Land; the Kuuk Thaayorre from Cape York and the Ngaatjatjarra/ Ngaanyatjarra from the Western Desert. The purpose of this examination is twofold. Firstly, we compare the etic kin relationships expressed by kin signs with their spoken equivalents. In all cases, categorical distinctions made in the spoken system are systematically merged in the sign system. Secondly, we consider the metonymic relationships between the kin categories expressed in sign and the various parts of the body at which those signs are articulated.
AB - Kinship plays a central role in organizing interaction and other social behaviors in Indigenous Australia. The spoken lexicon of kinship has been the target of extensive consideration by anthropologists and linguists alike. Less well explored, however, are the kin categories expressed through sign languages (notwithstanding the pioneering work of Adam Kendon). This paper examines the relational categories codified by the kin signs of four language-speaking groups from different parts of the Australian continent: the Anmatyerr from Central Australia; the Yolŋu from North East Arnhem Land; the Kuuk Thaayorre from Cape York and the Ngaatjatjarra/ Ngaanyatjarra from the Western Desert. The purpose of this examination is twofold. Firstly, we compare the etic kin relationships expressed by kin signs with their spoken equivalents. In all cases, categorical distinctions made in the spoken system are systematically merged in the sign system. Secondly, we consider the metonymic relationships between the kin categories expressed in sign and the various parts of the body at which those signs are articulated.
KW - Australian Indigenous languages
KW - Bimodal contact
KW - Kinship
KW - Sign language typology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85054359973&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1075/gest.00009.gre
DO - 10.1075/gest.00009.gre
M3 - Article
SN - 1568-1475
VL - 17
SP - 1
EP - 36
JO - Gesture
JF - Gesture
IS - 1
ER -