Event
The ASL Program in the Department of Linguistics and Penn
Humanities Forum are pleased to announce the ASL Lecture
Series event for Fall 2017.
Dr. Terra Edwards of Saint Louis University will be
presenting "Language for a Protactile World: social and
interactional foundations of language emergence in DeafBlind
communities" in Claire M. Fagin Hall
<https://www.facilities.upenn.edu/maps/locations/fagin-hall-claire-m>
Auditorium on Thursday, October 26, from 5-6:30 PM. Note the
change in venue; see link for location.
Light refreshments will be served following the talk and a
social hour will continue until 7:30.
*This event is free and open to the public. *
The talk
will be presented in ASL; voice interpretation will be
provided for non-signing audience members.
The abstract and bio can be found below.
For questions, please contact Jami Fisher, ASL Program
Coordinator, Department of Linguistics: jami@upenn.edu
*Please feel free to share with anyone who might be
interested *
Abstract:
This presentation analyzes key social and interactional
mechanisms driving a grammatical divergence between visual
American Sign Language (ASL) and protactile American Sign
Language (PTASL). This divergence was triggered by the
protactile social movement which originated in the Seattle
DeafBlind community in 2007 and since then has been
spreading across the country. Protactile leaders advance the
radical claim that all human activity can be realized
without the use of vision or hearing. As this movement has
taken root in practices and institutions, DeafBlind people
who were suffering from social isolation have found
themselves embedded in novel patterns of interaction,
discourse, and practice. As they find new ways to talk
within and about this world, the internal structure of their
language is recalibrated to it. This process is leading to
the emergence of new deictic and phonological systems in
PTASL. Drawing on more than 10 years of linguistic and
anthropological research and a recent pilot study conducted
in collaboration with Dr. Diane Brentari, a phonologist at
the University of Chicago, I offer a provisional sketch of
these novel grammatical systems, as well as discussing the
social and interactional foundations of their emergence. In
doing so, I aim to shed new light on how languages emerge
and develop.
Bio:
Terra Edwards' research, broadly construed, is concerned
with the interactional and social foundations of language
and language use. For the past 18 years, she has pursued
this interest in the Seattle DeafBlind community. Her
dissertation (Anthropology, University of California,
Berkeley, 2014) examines a grammatical divergence between
Visual American Sign Language (VASL) and Tactile American
Sign Language (TASL), triggered by the recent pro-tactile
movement. She has focused mostly on emergent phonological
and morphological systems in TASL.