Book review
. Gesture, Speech, and Sign. Oxford:: Oxford University Press, (1999).
Reviewed by
Published online: 6 June 2002
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.1.1.09tau
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.1.1.09tau
References (11)
Armstrong, David F., William C. Stokoe & Sherman Wilcox (1995). Gesture and the nature of language. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ekman, Paul & Wallace V. Friesen (1969). The repertoire of nonverbal behavior: Categories, origins, usage, and coding. Semiotica 11, 49–98.
Elman, Jeffrey, Elizabeth Bates, Mark Johnson, Anette Karmiloff-Smith, Domenico Parisi & Kim Plunkett (1998). Rethinking innateness: a connectionist perspective on development. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press/Bradford Books.
Emmorey, Karen, David P. Corina & Ursula Bellugi (1995). Differential processing of topographic and referential functions of space. In Karen Emmorey and Judy Reilly (Eds.), Language, gesture, and space, (pp. 43–62). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Hadar, Uri & Brian Butterworth (1997). Iconic gestures, imagery, and word retrieval in speech. Semiotica 1151, 147–172.
Kendon, Adam. (1980). Gesticulation and speech: Two aspects of the process of utterance. In Mary Ritchie Key (Ed.), Relationship of verbal and nonverbal communication, (pp. 207–227). Mouton: The Hague.
Liddell, Scott (2000). Blended spaces and deixis in sign language discourse. In David McNeill (Ed.), Language and gesture: Window into thought and action. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
McNeill, David (1992). Hand and mind: What gestures reveal about thought. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
McNeill, David & Laura L. Pedelty (1995). Right brain and gesture. In Karen Emmorey and Judy Reilly (Eds.), Language, gesture, and space, (pp. 63–85). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Neville, Helen, Daphne Bavelier, David P. Corina, Joseph Rauschecker, Avi Karni, Anil Lalwani, Allen Braun, Vince Clark, Peter Jezzard & Robert Turner (1998). Cerebral organization for language in deaf and hearing subjects: biological constraints and effects of experience. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 91, 3, 922–929.
Singleton, Jenny L., Susan Goldin-Meadow & David McNeill (1995). The cataclysmic break between gesticulation and sign: evidence against an evolutionary continuum of manual communication. In Karen Emmorey and Judy Reilly (Eds.), Language, gesture, and space, (pp. 287–311). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
