Do You See What I Mean?

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Do You See What I Mean?

Plains Indian Sign Talk and the Embodiment of Action

Brenda Farnell

400 pages
107 figures, 3 maps, 26 halftones, 3 tables

Paperback

June 2009

978-0-8032-2282-3

$30.00 Add to Cart

About the Book

Plains Indian Sign Talk (PST), a complex system of hand signs, once served as the lingua franca among many Native American tribes of the Great Plains, who spoke very different languages. Although some researchers thought it had disappeared following the establishment of reservations and the widespread adoption of English, Brenda Farnell discovered that PST is still an integral component of the storytelling tradition in contemporary Assiniboine (Nakota) culture.

Farnell’s research challenges the dominant European American view of language as a matter of words only. In Nakota language practices, she asserts, words and gestures are equal partners in the creation of meaning. Drawing on Nakota narratives videotaped during field research at the Fort Belknap reservation in northern Montana, she uses the movement script Labanotation to create texts of the movement content of these performances.

The first and only ethnographic study of contemporary uses of PST, Do You See What I Mean? draws on important developments in the study of language and culture to provide an action-centered analysis of spoken and gestural discourse. It offers a theoretical approach to language and the body that transcends the current “intellectualist” versus “phenomenological” impasse in social and linguistic theory.

Author Bio

Brenda Farnell is an associate professor of anthropology at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and the author of Human Action Signs in Cultural Context: The Visible and Invisible in Movement and Dance. She is coeditor of the Journal for the Anthropological Study of Human Movement.

Praise

“What is struggling to emerge is a theoretical framework in which the way that the different modalities of communication are articulated with one another can be understood. This book should be read by all those with an interest in the development of such a framework.”—Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute

“A major contribution to Native American studies, to cultural anthropology more generally, to linguistic anthropology, and to semiotics. . . . In one and the same book, Brenda Farnell reveals the power and precision of gesture in oral performance, makes major advances in the understanding of the storytelling process in general, and teaches us more about the world of Native Americans than we have learned in many a moon.”—James H. McNulty

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
1. The Nineteenth-Century Legacy
2. Bias against the Iconic
3. Geographical and Historical Spaces: Assiniboine Territory and the Embodiment of Deixis
4. Moral and Ethical Spaces: Naming Practices and Visual Imagery in Nakota and PST
5. Getting to the Point: Spatial Orientation and Deixis in PST and Nakota
6. Storytelling and the Embodiment of Symbolic Form
7. The Primacy of Movement in Assiniboine Culture
8. Conclusions
Appendix A. Phonetic Key
Appendix B. Kinetic Key
Notes
Bibliography
Index

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