And remember how much a hand can express,
How a single slight movement of it can say more
Than millions of words – dropped hand, clenched fist,
Snapping fingers, thump up, thumb down,
Raised in blessing, clutched in passion, begging,
Welcome, dismissal, prayer, applause,
And a million other signs, too slight, too subtle,
Too packed with meaning for words to describe,
A universal language understood by all.
That would be [prev in context] Hugh "Marxist" MacDiarmid suggesting that all human endeavour amounts to a bit of dust flicked heedlessly off God's cuff. I guess we're not usually conscious of gestures - either made by us or seen in others. But that's not to say either a) that we are heedless or b) that gestures don't matter.
I think that gesture may be treated separately from Sign Language on which I've had a good bit to say: BSL .ne. ISL - Makaton - Koko - Haptic - Washoe - SingAndSign. Tom Scott agrees that they are different; that gesture is co-speech or paralinguistic communication. Maybe like the adverbs of the basic comms.
If you are a normally unobservant person, you won't thank me for making you aware of co-speech. You'll never be comfortable watching your boss's left hand chopping the air to show herself she's in charge.
No comments:
Post a Comment