Publications
Recent and forthcoming books and publications
Books
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Roman Katsman 2008
At the Other End of Gesture
Anthropological Poetics of Gesture in Modern Hebrew Literature
Frankfurt am Main. Peter Lang
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This book discusses the enchantment and power of gesture in literature and art, using a wide selection of cultural and scientific materials, from the Bible, Quintillian and Buddhism to David McNeil's cognitive psychology, Eric Gans' philosophical anthropology and Richard Sennett's sociology. The author demonstrates that represented gestures, and even those that are not represented, originate a unique cognitive-physical interaction between the reader or viewer and the composition. The discussion focuses mainly on an analysis of gestural poetics in a number of works of modern Hebrew writers, from the beginning of the twentieth to the beginning of the twenty-first century, from Uri Nissan Gnessin and Jacob Steinberg to Meir Shalev and Etgar Keret. In the course of the discussion gesture is shown to be a micro-myth that unites order and chaos, a mechanism that establishes the power of symbolism and visibility in the modern culture of the "fall of public man". The study demonstrates the variety of ways in which a myth of impossible and inevitable touch-non-touch gestures is created.
Contents:
Gestures in culture - Non-touch gesture as an anthropological motive of art - Gesture between negation and constitution of personality - The formula of literary gesture: touch-non-touch - Gestology of symbolism: on the gestural origin of symbols - The nature of gesture: Liminality, Negativity, and Chaos - Poetics of visibility and gesture - Ritual, symbol, and memory constitution by gesture - Urban gesture - Public and private spaces, ethics and the possibility of gesture - Gesture and discourse.
The Author: Roman Katsman is a Senior Lecturer of Modern Hebrew literature, theory and poetics at the Department of Literature of the Jewish People, Bar-Ilan University (Israel). The author has published on Mythopoesis in Dostoevsky and Agnon and in Modern and Postmodern Hebrew and Slavic Literature.
For more information: http://www.peterlang.com/Index.cfm?vID=56689&vHR=1&vUR=2&vUUR=1&vLang=E
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Steven G. McCafferty and Gale Stam 2008
Gesture: Second Language Acquisition and Classroom Research.
New York.Routledge
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This book demonstrates the vital connection between language and gesture, and why it is critical for research on second language acquisition to take into account the full spectrum of communicative phenomena. The study of gesture in applied linguistics is just beginning to come of age. This edited volume, the first of its kind, covers a broad range of concerns that are central to the field of SLA. The chapters focus on a variety of second-language contexts, including adult classroom and naturalistic learners, and represent learners from a variety of language and cultural backgrounds.
Gesture: Second Language Acquisition and Classroom Research is organized in five sections:
Part I, Gesture and its L2 Applications, provides both an overview of gesture studies and a review of the L2 gesture research.
Part II, Gesture and Making Meaning in the L2, offers three studies that all take an explicitly sociocultural view of the role of gesture in SLA.
Part III, Gesture and Communication in the L2, focuses on the use and comprehension of gesture as an aspect of communication.
Part IV, Gesture and Linguistic Structure in the L2, addresses the relationship between gesture and the acquisition of linguistic features, and how gesture relates to proficiency.
Part V, Gesture and the L2 Classroom, considers teachers’ gestures, students’ gestures, and how students’ interpret teachers’ gestures.
Although there is a large body of research on gesture across a number of disciplines including anthropology, communications, psychology, sociology, and child development, to date there has been comparatively little investigation of gesture within applied linguistics. This volume provides readers unfamiliar with L2 gesture studies with a powerful new lens with which to view many aspects of language in use, language learning, and language teaching.
For authors and Table of Contents see:
http://www.routledgeeducation.com/books/Gesture-isbn9780805860535
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Isabella Poggi 2007
Hands, Mind, Face and Body: A Goal and Belief View of Multimodal Communication
Berlin. Weidler
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Communication is multimodal. In everyday interaction we do not communicate only by words, but by our whole body. We talk by gestures, facial expression, gaze, body movements, posture, and these communicative modalities interact with each other in subtle and complex ways. But can we disentangle the different sounds in a symphony, the different pieces in a mosaic? This book claims that the communication scholar can write down the musical score of the communicative symphony by attributing a specific meaning to each single signal - to each gesture, gaze, facial expression - and by finding out lexicons of all communicative modalities. If Linguists have been writing dictionaries of verbal languages for millennia, why not start compiling a new type of dictionaries, and discover the lexicons and the alphabets of gestures, gaze, or touch? Part I of this book (Mind) presents a cognitive model of communication in terms of the notions of goal and belief; Parts II (Hands) and III (Face) analyse gestural and facial communication in detail, by distinguishing universal and cultural aspects in gesture and gaze, showing the differences between gestures that are codified in our mind and gestures that we create on the spot, and teaching how to make a dictionary of touch or how to find the meanings conveyed by the eyebrows. Part IV (Body) presents an annotation scheme to transcribe and analyse signals in all modalities and to capture the meaning of their interaction, that has proved useful for empirical research on multimodality and for its simulation in Embodied Conversational Agents; to illustrate the potentialities of this tool, multimodal discourses are analysed, taken from TV talk shows, political discourse, classroom interaction, speech-therapy sessions, judicial debates, university examinations and comic movies. The subtleties of multimodality are dissected, showing how the whole body can be a tool for indirect and contradictory messages, deception, joke, irony and other sophisticated uses of communication.
Prof. Dr. Isabella Poggi teaches General Psychology and Psychology of Communication at Roma Tre University. She works to the construction of a cognitive model of mind, social interaction and communication, through conceptual analysis, observative research and simulation in Embodied Agents. After her first research about the teaching of Italian as a first language, she has published books and papers about emotions (guilt, shame, humiliation, pity, enthusiasm), deception, persuasion, verbal and multimodal communication in humans and machines.
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Susan Duncan, Justine Cassell and Elena Levy 2007
Gesture and the Dynamic Dimension of Language
Amsterdam: Benjamins
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Each of the 21 chapters in this volume reflects a view of language as a dynamic phenomenon with emergent structure, and in each, gesture is approached as part of language, not an adjunct to it. Together, these papers support and contribute to David McNeill’s theory and methodology.The introductory chapter by Adam Kendon contextualizes McNeill’s perspective within a history of earlier gesture studies. Kendon’s own research, from the early 1970s on, has itself been foundational to the development of McNeill’s paradigm and his paper makes clear the historical foundations of all the work represented in the volume. The rest of the book is divided into two main sections, “Language and Cognition” and “Environmental Context and Sociality.” We might say that the work detailed in the chapters of the first section emphasizes the ‘intrapersonal plane’, while that in the second section emphasizes the ‘interpersonal plane’. The final section, “Atypical Minds and Bodies,” concerns lessons to be learned from studies of aphasic patients, autistic children, and artificial humans.
For authors and Table of Contents see:
http://www.benjamins.com/cgi-bin/t_bookview.cgi?bookid=GS%201
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David McNeill 2005
Gesture and Thought
Chicago: Chicago University Press
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Gesturing is such an integral yet unconscious part of communication that we are mostly oblivious to it. But if you observe anyone in conversation, you are likely to see his or her fingers, hands, and arms in some form of spontaneous motion. Why? David McNeill, a pioneer in the ongoing study of the relationship between gesture and language, set about answering this question over twenty-five years ago. In Gesture and Thought he brings together years of this research, arguing that gesturing, an act which has been popularly understood as an accessory to speech, is actually a dialectical component of language. Gesture and Thought expands on McNeill’s acclaimed classic Hand and Mind. While that earlier work demonstrated what gestures reveal about thought, here gestures are shown to be active participants in both speaking and thinking. Expanding on an approach introduced by Lev Vygotsky in the 1930s, McNeill posits that gestures are key ingredients in an “imagery-language dialectic” that fuels both speech and thought. Gestures are both the “imagery” and components of “language.” The smallest element of this dialectic is the “growth point,” a snapshot of an utterance at its beginning psychological stage. Utilizing several innovative experiments he created and administered with subjects spanning several different age, gender, and language groups, McNeill shows how growth points organize themselves into utterances and extend to discourse at the moment of speaking. An ambitious project in the ongoing study of the relationship of human communication and thought, Gesture and Thought is a work of such consequence that it will influence all subsequent theory on the subject.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Part 1. Preliminaries; Chapter 1. Why Gestures?; Chapter 2. How Gestures Carry Meaning
Part 2. Dialectic; Chapter 3. Two Dimensions; Chapter 4. Imagery-Language Dialectic
§4.1. Dialectic and Material Carriers; 4.2. The Growth Point; 4.3. Extensions of GP; 4.4. Social-Interactive Context; Chapter 5. Discourse; Chapter 6. Children and Whorf
Part 3. Brain and Origins; Chapter 7. Neurogesture; Chapter 8. The Thought-Language-Hand Link and Language Origins
Appendix. Methods of Gesture Recording and Transcription, Including New Semiautomated Methods
Plus “The Growth Point”A Poem.
References
Index
For details:
http://mcneilllab.uchicago.edu/projects/projects.html
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Shaun Gallagher 2005
How the Body Shapes the Mind
Oxford: Oxford University Press
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How the Body Shapes the Mind is an interdisciplinary work that addresses philosophical questions by appealing to evidence found in experimental psychology, neuroscience, studies of pathologies, and developmental psychology. There is a growing consensus across these disciplines that the contribution of embodiment to cognition is inescapable. Because this insight has been developed across a variety of disciplines, however, there is still a need to develop a common vocabulary that is capable of integrating discussions of brain mechanisms in neuroscience, behavioral expressions in psychology, design concerns in artificial intelligence and robotics, and debates about embodied experience in the phenomenology and philosophy of mind. Shaun Gallagher's book aims to contribute to the formulation of that common vocabulary and to develop a conceptual framework that will avoid both the overly reductionistic approaches that explain everything in terms of bottom-up neuronal mechanisms, and inflationistic approaches that explain everything in terms of Cartesian, top-down cognitive states.
Gallagher pursues two basic sets of questions. The first set consists of questions about the phenomenal aspects of the structure of experience, and specifically the relatively regular and constant features that we find in the content of our experience. If throughout conscious experience there is a constant reference to one's own body, even if this is a recessive or marginal awareness, then that reference constitutes a structural feature of the phenomenal field of consciousness, part of a framework that is likely to determine or influence all other aspects of experience. The second set of questions concerns aspects of the structure of experience that are more hidden, those that may be more difficult to get at because they happen before we know it. They do not normally enter into the content of experience in an explicit way, and are often inaccessible to reflective consciousness. To what extent, and in what ways, are consciousness and cognitive processes, which include experiences related to perception, memory, imagination, belief, judgement, and so forth, shaped or structured by the fact that they are embodied in this way? See also:
http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/~gallaghr/gallpubs.html
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Barbara J. King, 2004
The Dynamic Dance: Nonvocal Communication in the African Great Apes
Harvard University Press |
In this book, Barbara King discusses gesture of chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas, and the relationship of ape gesture to human language. Mother and infant negotiate over food; two high-status males jockey for power; female kin band together to get their way. It happens among humans and it happens among our closest living relatives in the animal kingdom, the great apes of Africa. In this eye-opening book, we see precisely how such events unfold in chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas: through a spontaneous, mutually choreographed dance of actions, gestures, and vocalizations in which social partners create meaning and come to understand each other.
Using dynamic systems theory, an approach employed to study human communication, Barbara King is able to demonstrate the genuine complexity of apes' social communication, and the extent to which their interactions generate meaning. As King describes, apes create meaning primarily through their body movements--and go well beyond conveying messages about food, mating, or predators. Readers come to know the captive apes she has observed, and others across Africa as well, and to understand "the process of creating social meaning."
This new perspective not only acquaints us with our closest living relatives, but informs us about a possible pathway for the evolution of language in our own species. King's theory challenges the popular idea that human language is instinctive, with rules and abilities hardwired into our brains. Rather, The Dynamic Dance suggests, language has its roots in the gestural "building up of meaning" that was present in the ancestor we shared with the great apes, and that we continue to practice to this day.
For details:
http://www.hup.harvard.edu/reviews/KINDYN_R.html
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Adam Kendon, 2004.
Gesture: Visible Action as Utterance.
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
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Gesture, or visible bodily action that is seen as intimately involved in the activity of speaking, has long fascinated scholars and laymen alike. Written by a leading authority on the subject, this long-awaited study provides a comprehensive treatment of gesture and its use in interaction, drawing on the analysis of everyday conversations to demonstrate its varied role in the construction of utterances. Adam Kendon accompanies his analyses with an extended discussion of the history of the study of gesture - a topic not dealt with in any previous publication - as well as exploring the relationship between gesture and sign language, and how the use of gesture varies according to cultural and language differences. Set to become the definitive account of the topic, Gesture will be invaluable to all those interested in human communication. Its publication marks a major development, both in semiotics and in the emerging field of gesture studies.
Contents:
1. The domain of gesture; 2. Visible action as gesture; 3. Western interest in gesture from classical antiquity to the eighteenth century; 4. Four contributions from the nineteenth century: Andrea de Jorio, Edward Tylor, Garrick Mallery and Wilhelm Wundt; 5. Gesture studies in the twentieth century: recession and return; 6. Classifying gestures; 7. Gesture units, gesture phrases and speech; 8. Deployments of gesture in the utterance; 9. Gesture and speech in semantic interaction; 10. Gesture and referential meaning; 11. On pointing; 12. Gestures of the 'precision-grip': topic, comment and question markers; 13. Two gesture families of the open hand; 14. Gesture without speech: the emergence of kinesic codes; 15. Gesture and sign on common ground; 16. Gesture, culture and thec ommunication economy; 17. The status of gesture; Appendix I. Transcription conventions; Appendix II. The recordings.)
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Nevile, Maurice. 2004.
Beyond the black box: talk-in-interaction in the airline cockpit.
Aldershot: Ashgate. (In a new series: Directions in Ethnomethodology and Conversation Analysis. Series editors D.Francis and S.Hester.) |
An airline pilot and researcher in 'aviation human factors' once described the goal of all airline pilots as "to get people from A to B without killing them": this book explores the place of talk-in-interaction in pilots' achievement of this laudable goal. The book uses video data of pilots at work on regular scheduled passenger flights to study routine talk-in-interaction in the airline cockpit. It explores how, through processes of talk-in-interaction, pilots develop and make available to one another their situated and moment-to-moment understandings as they work together as a flight crew to perform necessary activities and tasks, and attend and respond to events and emerging circumstances. I consider how pilots establish what is going on around them, who knows what, who is doing what, and exactly where they are up to and what they are to do next. In this way the book throws light on what it is to be, accountably and recognisably, an airline pilot, and shows how every airline flight is not just a mechanical and technological triumph, and some would say miracle, but is also the outcome of human performance and interaction. The book joins a growing interest in interaction in workplace or institutional settings, and in particular joins recent studies which look in detail at interaction in sociotechnical settings where groups or teams coordinate their talk and non-talk activities to perform tasks and complete goals. It adds to findings of these studies on human cognition as situated, embodied, and socially shared, and in particular develops previous research on cognition in the airline cockpit. Detailed study of routine cockpit talk allows us to see just how the modern airline cockpit is both the epitome of the high technology workplace, with its bewildering array of computers, displays, buttons, switches, dials, levers and lights, and also very much a setting for human interaction.
Contents
The workplace as social interaction. Part I: 'I'll Take Climb Power.' Accomplishing Cockpit Identities Through Pronominal Language: Accomplishing cockpit identities: (1) prescribed pronominal forms; Accomplishing cockpit identities: (2) non-prescribed pronominal forms. Part II: 'That's Set.' Coordinating Talk and Non-Talk Activity: Accomplishing takeoff tasks; Managing tasks in flight. Part III: 'He Said Final Approach Speed.' Integrating Talk-In-Interaction Within and Beyond the Cockpit: Talking with controllers: (1) pilotpilot talk occasioned by talk with controllers; Talking with controllers: (2) abstaining from pilotpilot talk about talk with controllers; Conclusion and implications; References; Index.
For details:
http://www.paultenhave.nl/nbooks.htm#Nevile
http://www.ashgate.com
Papers and Reviews
The Special Issue of the Journal First Language: Gesture and Communicative Development edited by Michele Guidetti and Elena Nicoladis is published (http://fla.sagepub.com/content/vol28/issue2/).
The Semiotic Bulletin 9 (May 2007) published an article by Cornelia Müller on the life and works of Adam Kendon titled "Asemiotic profile: Adam Kendon" (link).
Scientific American Mind (October 2006) published an article on gesture by Ipke Wachsmuth titled "Gestures Offer Insight: Hand and arm movements do much more than accent words; they provide context for understanding" (link).
The International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (Volume: 44 | Issue: 2)has published a special issue on gesture and second language acquisition (link)
Paper by Simone Pika and John Mitani "Referential gestural communication in wild chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes). Current Biology 2006 16: R191-R192. (link)
Paper by Marilyn Panayi "Spatial Cognition in Action - SCA Model: Children's Gestural Imagery in Action" (download abstract doc) in Process in Neural Processing Vol 16: Modelling Language Cognition and Action. Proceedings of the Ninth Neural Computation and Psychology Workshop, University of Plymouth, UK 8 - 10 September 2004 (link)
Review by Hugues de Chanay (U. Lyon 2), in the electronic review Marges linguistiques, no. 9 (link, download review pdf) of L'expression gestuelle de la pensée d'un homme politique, Calbris, G. (2003).
Quick Reviews by Paul Bouissac in the Semiotix Bulletin 3 of
Gesture: Visible Action as Utterance (Adam Kendon)
Gestures: Meaning and Use (Monica Rector, Isabella Poggi, Nadine Trigo, eds.)
L'expression gestuelle de la pensée d'un homme politique (Geneviève Calbris) at (link)
Please send any news items to Mandana Seyfeddinipur
References
Beattie, G. (2003). Visible Thought: The New Psychology of Body Language. London: Routledge.
Bouvet, D. & Morelle, M. (2003). Le ballet et la musique de la parole. Paris: Ophrys, Collection Bibliothèque Faits de langues. http://www.ophrys.fr/sources/catalogue
Calbris, G. (2003). L'expression gestuelle de la pensée d'un homme politique. Paris: CNRS Éditions, Collection CNRS Communication. http://www.cnrseditions.fr
Corbeill, A. (2004). Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/titles/7681.html
Ekman, P. (2003). Emotions Revealed. Henry Bolt & Company. www.bn.com
Gallagher, S. 2005. How the Body Shapes the Mind. Oxford: Oxford University Press. http://www.oup.co.uk/isbn/0-19-927194-1
Goldin-Meadow, S. (2003). Hearing Gesture: How Our Hands Help us Think. Harvard University Press. http://goldin-meadow-lab.uchicago.edu/hear_gest.html
Kendon, A. (2004). Gesture: Visible Action as Utterance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521835259
McNeill, D. (2005). Gesture and Thought. Chicago. Chicago University Press. http://www.press.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/hfs.cgi/00/154862.ctl
Müller, C. & Posner, R. (Eds.). (2003). The semantics and pragmatics of everyday gestures: The Berlin Conference. Berlin: Weidler Buchverlag. Title.jpg
Rector, M., Poggi, I., & Trigo, N. (Eds.). (2003). Gestures : Their meaning and use. Oporto: Fernando Pessoa UP.
Smart, M. A. (2004). Mimomania: Music and Gesture in Nineteenth-Century Opera. Los Angeles: University of California Press. http://www.ucpress.edu/books/pages/9574.html
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