Seeing Language in Sign

The Work of William C. Stokoe

Hardcover, 195 pages

English language

Published May 2, 1996 by Gallaudet University Press.

ISBN:
9781563680533
OCLC Number:
33664678
Goodreads:
809469

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In 1995 William C. Stokoe arrived at Gallaudet College (later Gallaudet University) to teach English, specifically Chaucer. His own education in Old and Middle English, however, triggered a disparate response within him when he was first exposed to deaf people signing. While most of his colleagues conformed to current conventional theory and dismissed signing as mere mimicry of speech, Stokoe saw in it elements of a distinctive language all its own. Seeing Language in Sign traces the process that Stokoe followed to prove scientifically and unequivocally that American Sign Language (ASL) met the full criteria of linguistics - phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics and use of language - to be classified a fully developed language. This perceptive account dramatically captures the struggle Stokoe faced in persuading the establishment of the truth of his discovery. Other faculty members ridiculed or reviled him, and many deaf members of the Gallaudet community laughed at …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Doven
  • Teachers of the deaf
  • Gebarentaal
  • American Sign Language
  • Linguists
  • Gehörlosigkeit
  • Zeichen
  • Biography
  • Nonfiction

Places

  • United States