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Jane Maher - Seeing language in sign: the work of William C. Stokoe

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In 1955 William C. Stokoe arrived at Gallaudet College (later Gallaudet University) to teach English where he was first exposed to deaf people signing. While most of his colleagues 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 his efforts. Seeing Language in Sign rewards the reader with a rich portrayal of an undaunted advocate who, like a latter-day Galileo, pursued his vision doggedly regardless of relentless antagonism. He established the Linguistics Research Laboratory, then founded the journal Sign Language Studies to sustain an unpopular dialogue until the tide changed. His ultimate vindication corresponded with the recognition of the glorious culture and community that revolves around Deaf people and their language, ASL.

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title Seeing Language in Sign The Work of William C Stokoe author - photo 1

title:Seeing Language in Sign : The Work of William C. Stokoe
author:Maher, Jane.
publisher:Gallaudet University Press
isbn10 | asin:
print isbn13:9781563680533
ebook isbn13:9780585103310
language:English
subjectStokoe, William C, Teachers of the deaf--United States--Biography, Linguists--United States--Biography, American Sign Language.
publication date:1996
lcc:HV2534.S76M35 1996eb
ddc:419/.092
subject:Stokoe, William C, Teachers of the deaf--United States--Biography, Linguists--United States--Biography, American Sign Language.
Page i
Seeing Language in Sign
Page ii
Page iii Seeing Language in Sign The Work of William C Stokoe By - photo 2
Page iii
Seeing Language in Sign
The Work of William C. Stokoe
By Jane Maher
Forward by Oliver Sacks
GALLAUDET UNIVERSITY PRESS WASHINGTON, D.C.
Page iv
Gallaudet University Press
Washington, DC 20002
Text 1996 by Gallaudet University
Foreword 1996 by Oliver Sacks
All rights reserved. Published 1996
Printed in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Maher, Jane, 1947
Seeing language in sign : the work of William C.
Stokoe / Jane Maher : foreword by Oliver Sacks
p. cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN i-56368-053-x (alk. paper)
i. Stokoe, William C. 2. Teachers of the deafUnited
States Biography. 3. Linguists United States
Biography. 4. American Sign Language. I. Title.
HV2534.S76M35 1996
419'.092 dc20
[B]Picture 3Picture 4Picture 5Picture 6Picture 7Picture 895-46906
Picture 9Picture 10Picture 11Picture 12Picture 13Picture 14CIP
Picture 15The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of American National Standard for Information SciencesPermanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI z39.48-1984.
Page v
FOR MY MOTHER
Anne Peronti
Page vii
Contents
Foreword
by Oliver Sacks
ix
Acknowledgments
xvii
Introduction
1
Chapter One
6
Chapter Two
24
Chapter Three
40
Chapter Four
58
Chapter Five
79
Chapter Six
101
Chapter Seven
131
Chapter Eight
161
Notes
179
Index
191

Page ix
Foreword
I first met Bill Stokoe in December of 1986. 1 was nervous about meeting him: he was the man who had cracked American Sign Language (intellectually equivalent to cracking the Rosetta Stone, and emotionally, morally, infinitely more difficult because no one, least of all the deaf, thought of Sign as a real language until he did this), and I was a complete outsidernot deaf, not a linguist, not even capable of more than the most rudimentary signing. I had also heard that he was sometimes prickly, impatient, arrogant, a man of fierce and uncompromising forthrightness.
What I found was a man immensely humble, a man who felt he had been given far more than he had received, and he was immensely generous. I found him wonderfully, bracingly, direct and openso immediate and candid and unguarded that my own diffidence and defenses, the armor with which one encases oneself for first encounters, melted away on the spot. We ranged over many different subjects, and I got an intense sense of the range, the delicacy, and the richness of his mind. A few days later he sent me a parcel of booksincluding his own, much annotated, personal copy of Language Origins
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