Body - language - communication. Volume 2 /

Volume II of the handbook offers the state of the art on how body movements are used for communication around the world. Topics include the functions of body movements, their contexts of occurrence, their forms and meanings, their integration with speech, and how bodily motion can function as langua...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Muller, Cornelia
Corporate Authors: De Gruyter.
Published: De Gruyter Mouton,
Publisher Address: Berlin/Boston :
Publication Dates: [2014]
Literature type: eBook
Language: English
Series: Handb cher zur sprach- und kommunikationswissenschaft / handbooks of linguistics and communication science (hsk); 38/2
Body - language - communication; Volume 2
Subjects:
Online Access: http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9783110302028
http://www.degruyter.com/doc/cover/9783110302028.jpg
Summary: Volume II of the handbook offers the state of the art on how body movements are used for communication around the world. Topics include the functions of body movements, their contexts of occurrence, their forms and meanings, their integration with speech, and how bodily motion can function as language. An interdisciplinary chapter on embodiment explores the body and its role in the grounding of language from current theoretical perspectives.
Carrier Form: 1 online resource(xii,1074pages) : illustrations.
Also available in print edition.
ISBN: 9783110302028(electronic bk.)
Index Number: P99
CLC: H026.3
Contents: 117. Pragmatic and metaphoric combining functional with cognitive approaches in the analysis of the "brushing aside gesture" /
118. Recurrent gestures /
119. A repertoire of German recurrent gestures with pragmatic functions /
120. The family of Away gestures: Negation, refusal, and negative assessment /
121. The cyclic gesture /
122. Kinesthemes: Morphological complexity in co-speech gestures /
123. Gesture families and gestural fields /
124. Repetitions in gesture /
125. Syntactic complexity in co-speech gestures: Constituency and recursion /
126. Creating multimodal utterances: The linear integration of gestures into speech /
127. Gestures and location in English /
128. Gestural modes of representation as techniques of depiction /
129. Levels of abstraction /
130. Gestures and iconicity /
131. Iconic and representational gestures /
132. Gestures and metonymy /
133. Ways of viewing metaphor in gesture /
134. The conceptualization of time in gesture /
135. Between reference and meaning: Object-related and interpretant-related gestures in face-to-face interaction /
136. Deixis, gesture, and embodiment from a linguistic point of view /
137. Pointing by hand: Types of reference and their influence on gestural form /
138. Gestures and cognitive development /
139. Embodied cognition and word acquisition: The challenge of abstract words /
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152. Gestures, postures, gaze, and movements in computer science: Embodied agents /
153. The psychology of gestures and gesture-like movements in non-human primates /
154. An evolutionary perspective on facial behavior /
155. On the consequences of living without facial expression /
156. Multimodal forms of expressing emotions: The case of interjections /
157. Some issues in the semiotics of gesture: The perspective of comparative semiotics /
158. Embodied meaning, inside and out: The coupling of gesture and mental simulation /
159. Embodied and distributed contexts of collaborative remembering /
160. Living bodies: Co-enacting experience /
161. Aproprioception, gesture, and cognitive being /
162. Embodying audio-visual media: Concepts and transdisciplinary perspectives /
163. Cinematic communication and embodiment /
164. The discovery of the acting body /
165. Expressive movements in audio-visual media: Modulating affective experience /
166. Expressive movement and metaphoric meaning making in audio-visual media /
167. Gesture as interactive expressive movement: Inter-affectivity in face-to-face communication /
168. Linguistic structures in a manual modality: Phonology and morphology in sign languages /
169. The grammaticalization of gest
Frontmatter --
Contents --
73. Gestures in South Africa /
74. Gestures in the Sub-Saharan region /
75. Gestures in West Africa: Left hand taboo in Ghana /
76. Gestures in West Africa: Wolof /
77. Gestures in South America: Spanish and Portuguese /
78. Gestures in South American indigenous cultures /
79. Gestures in native South America: Ancash Quechua /
80. Gestures in native Mexico and Central America: The Mayan cultures /
81. Gestures in native Northern America: Bimodal talk in Arapaho /
82. Gestures in Southwest India: Dance theater /
83. Gestures in China: Universal and culturally specific characteristics /
84. Gestures and body language in Southern Europe: Italy /
85. Gestures in Southern Europe: Children s pragmatic gestures in Italy /
86. Gestures in Southwest Europe: Portugal /
87. Gestures in Southwest Europe: Catalonia /
88. Gestures in Western Europe: France /
89. Gestures in Northern Europe: Children s gestures in Sweden /
90. Gestures in Northeast Europe: Russia, Poland, Croatia, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia /
91. Body posture and movement in interaction: Participation management /
92. Proxemics and axial orientation /
93. The role of gaze in conversational interaction /
94. Categories and functions of posture, gaze, face, and body movements /
95. Facial expression and social interaction /
96. Gestures, postures, gaze, and movement in work and organization /