Journal article
Tradition and innovation: Using sign language in a Gurindji community in Northern Australia
J Green, F Meakins, C Algy
Australian Journal of Linguistics | Published : 2022
Abstract
In the Gurindji community of Kalkaringi in Northern Australia the shared practices of everyday communication employed by both hearing and deaf members of the community include conventionalized manual actions from the lexicon of Indigenous sign as well as some recent visual practices derived from contact with both written English and with Auslan. We consider some dimensions of these multimodal practices, including kinship signs and signs for time-reference, and discuss several notable features in these domains. The first is gender-motivated use of the left and right sides of the body in several kinship signs. The second is the use of celestial anchoring in some signs for time. The use of spat..
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Grants
Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This research has been supported by an ARC (Australian Research Council) Fellowship (DE160100873), an ILA (Indigenous Languages and Arts) grant and by the ARC Centre of Excellence for the Dynamics of Language (CoEDL) (CE140100041).