La Mimica Degli Antichi Investigata Nel Gestire Napoletano With Plates


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La Mimica degli Antichi, investigata nel gestire Napoletano. [With plates.]


La Mimica degli Antichi, investigata nel gestire Napoletano. [With plates.]

Author: Andrea di Jorio

language: it

Publisher:

Release Date: 1832


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Gesture in Naples and Gesture in Classical Antiquity


Gesture in Naples and Gesture in Classical Antiquity

Author: Andrea de Jorio

language: en

Publisher: Indiana University Press

Release Date: 2000


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It also deals with numerous issues important for any semiotics of gesture, such as the question of the relationship between physical forms and meaning, the problem of how to present a description of the gestural repertoire of a community in a consistent manner, the importance of context for the interpretation of gesture, how gestures may be combined, and how they develop as metaphorical expressions."--Jacket.

Sign Talk: A Universal Signal Code, Without Appara, Hunting, and Daily Life


Sign Talk: A Universal Signal Code, Without Appara, Hunting, and Daily Life

Author: Ernest Thompson Seaton

language: en

Publisher: anboco

Release Date: 2016-08-06


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In offering this book to the public after having had the manuscript actually on my desk for more than nine years, let me say frankly that no one realizes better than myself, now, the magnitude of the subject and the many faults of my attempt to handle it. My attention was first directed to the Sign Language in 1882 when I went to live in Western Manitoba. There I found it used among the various Indian tribes as a common language, whenever they were unable to understand each other's speech. In later years I found it a daily necessity when traveling among the natives of New Mexico and Montana, and in 1897, while living among the Crow Indians at their agency near Fort Custer, I met White Swan, who had served under General George A. Custer as a Scout. He had been sent across country with a message to Major Reno, so escaped the fatal battle; but fell in with a party of Sioux, by whom he was severely wounded, clubbed on the head, and left for dead. He recovered and escaped, but ever after was deaf and practically dumb. However, sign-talk was familiar to his people and he was at little disadvantage in daytime. Always skilled in the gesture code, he now became very expert; I was glad indeed to be his pupil, and thus in 1897 began seriously to study the Sign Language. In 1900 I included a chapter on Sign Language in my projected Woodcraft Dictionary, and began by collecting all the literature. There was much more than I expected, for almost all early travellers in our Western Country have had something to say about this lingua franca of the Plains. As the material continued to accumulate, the chapter grew into a Dictionary, and the work, of course, turned out manifold greater than was expected. The Deaf, our School children, and various European nations, as well as the Indians, had large sign vocabularies needing consideration.