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Stanford Semantics and Pragmatics Workshop
THE CONSTRUCTION OF MEANING
 
 

Leonard Talmy

The Representation of Spatial Structure in Spoken and Signed Languages

Abstract:

Linguistic research to date has determined many of the factors that structure the spatial schemas found across spoken languages.  It is now feasible to integrate these factors and to determine the comprehensive system they constitute for spatial structuring in spoken language.  This system is characterized by several features: It has a relatively closed universally available inventory of fundamental spatial elements that are combined to form whole schemas. It has a relatively closed set of categories that these elements
appear in.  And it has a relatively closed small number of particular elements in each category, hence, of spatial distinctions that each category can ever mark.
       An examination of signed language shows that its structural representation of space systematically differs from that in spoken language in the direction of what appear to be the structural characteristics of scene parsing in visual perception.  Such differences include the following:  Signed language can mark finer
spatial distinctions with its inventory of more structural elements, more categories, and more elements per category.  It represents many more of these distinctions in any particular expression.  It also represents these distinctions independently in the expression, not bundled together into "pre-packaged" schemas.  And its spatial representations are largely iconic with visible spatial characteristics. The findings suggest that instead of some discrete whole-language module, spoken language and signed language are both based on some more limited core linguistic system that then connects with different further subsystems for the full functioning of the two different language modalities.
 
 
 

 


This workshop is sponsored by the Stanford Humanities Center, and funded by a grant from the Mellon Foundation.
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