Article published In: Recurrent Gestures
Edited by Simon Harrison, Silva H. Ladewig and Jana Bressem
[Gesture 20:2] 2021
► pp. 254–284
The feel of a recurrent gesture
Embedding the Vertical Palm within a gift-giving episode in China (aka the ‘seesaw battle’)
Published online: 30 May 2022
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.21003.har
https://doi.org/10.1075/gest.21003.har
Abstract
The inner workings of recurrent gestures can now be distilled from almost three decades’ worth of fine-grained
studies into gesture form variants, kinesic organization with speech, core semantic themes, and discourse-interactive functions.
Yet several questions about this gesture category have remained in the background. How do such gestures relate to the behavioral
activities within which they occur, their wider embodied and intercorporeal context, and the relations between the people
performing them? These questions are addressed by adopting an enactive approach to human relating and by analysing how the Vertical
Palm gesture form materializes during an episode of gift-giving between two friends in China, where the practice involves
elaborate embodied maneuvers resulting in a visibly affective ‘seesaw battle’. Treating gift-giving as a situation for
participatory sense-making spun from a complex web of sensorimotor schemes, this seesaw battle provides a natural ecology for
exploring understudied dimensions of the Vertical Palm recurrent gesture as embodied, embedded, and enacted during a practice with
culturally-specific dimensions.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 1.1Enaction theory and participatory sense-making
- 1.2Gift giving in China
- 2.Methodology
- 2.1Data transcription and analysis
- 2.2Data analysis
- 3.Micro-analysis
- 4.Discussion
- 5.Afterthought
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
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