Review published In: Sign Language Syntax from a Formal Perspective: Selected Papers from the 2012 Warsaw FEAST
Edited by Paweł Rutkowski
[Sign Language & Linguistics 16:2] 2013
► pp. 259–268
Book review
. Sign Languages in Village Communities: Anthropological and Linguistic Insights. Berlin: Mouton de Gruyter, 2012. € 99.95 / $ 140.00vii + 413 pp. ISBN 978-1614512035
Reviewed by
Published online: 12 December 2013
https://doi.org/10.1075/sll.16.2.06hou
https://doi.org/10.1075/sll.16.2.06hou
References (14)
de Vos, Connie. 2012. Sign-spatiality in Kata Kolok: How a village sign language of Bali inscribes its signing space. PhD dissertation, Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics, Nijmegen.
Goldin-Meadow, Susan. 2003. The resilience of language: What gesture creation in deaf children can tell us about how all children learn language. New York: Psychology Press.
Groce, Nora. 1985. Everyone here spoke sign language. Hereditary deafness on Martha’s Vineyard. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Kakumasu, Jim. 1968. Urubú Sign Language. International Journal of American Linguistics 341. 275–281.
Kisch, Shifra. 2008. The social construction of deafness in a Bedouin community in the Negev. Medical Anthropology 271. 283–313.
Mathur, Gaurav & Christian Rathmann. 2012. Verb agreement. In Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach & Bencie Woll (eds.), Sign language: An international handbook, 136–157. Berlin: De Gruyer Mouton.
Meier, Richard P. 2002. Why different, why the same? Explaining effects and non-effects of modality upon linguistic structure in sign and speech. In Richard Meier, Kearsy Cormier & David Quinto-Pozos (eds.), Modality in signed and spoken languages, 1–25. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Meir, Irit, Wendy Sandler, Carol Padden & Mark Aronoff. 2010. Emerging sign languages. In Mark Marschark & Patricia E. Spencer (eds.), Oxford handbook of deaf studies, language, and education, vol. 21, 267–280. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Nonaka, Angela M. 2009. Estimating size, scope, and membership of the speech/sign communities of undocumented indigenous/village sign languages: The Ban Khor case study. Language & Communication 291. 210–229.
Nyst, Victoria. 2007. A descriptive analysis of Adamorobe Sign Language (Ghana). PhD dissertation, University of Amsterdam. Utrecht: LOT.
. 2012. Shared sign languages. In Roland Pfau, Markus Steinbach & Bencie Woll (eds.), Sign language: An international handbook, 552–574. Berlin: De Gruyter Mouton.
