pointing, not with finger
David Lessard
david.lessard2 at MAIL.MCGILL.CA
Wed Mar 6 17:28:13 UTC 2013
They were indeed quick about it. I just had asked it casually, like spontaneously in the moment. So I don't mean to have any conclusion with it. They were two men who told me so, one in his 40s and the other in his 60s, and they were from totally different places and did not know each other. I however noticed that they did it systematically and never seen them pointing with finger.
For Ecuador, it was a friend in his 30s that told me about it. He said that pointing a finger was necessarily accusative and given security issues in the country when he grew up, you could get in much trouble if you pointed randomly at people in public places. I noticed that they would point to things with their lips while still looking at their interlocutor. It was thus quite discreet and when looked at from outside the conversation, you could not tell if they were pointing or nodding, or saying they did not know.
It both cases, they use both the chin and the lips, as if they were blowing a kiss, but without opening them. I have seen it so many times that the habit grew on me.
This is all I know, but it is something that always caught my attention, so would like to know more about it.
David
Envoyé à partir de mon Windows Phone
________________________________
De : Margaret Noori
Envoyé : 2013-03-06 12:11
À : ALGONQUIANA at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG
Objet : Re: pointing, not with finger
This is interesting. How well did you know the people you asked? How old were they? It seems like 1/2 reply to me and I wonder if they were just being quick about it or if they no longer get taught the same lesson as the Anishinaabe.
On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 10:44 AM, David Lessard <david.lessard2 at mail.mcgill.ca<mailto:david.lessard2 at mail.mcgill.ca>> wrote:
I have seen this among the James Bay Cree. I asked why and they told me it was more efficient when they had their hands full. I did not investigate further though.
I have been told that it is an habit in Ecuador too.
David
Envoyé à partir de mon Windows Phone
________________________________
De : Conor Quinn
Envoyé : 2013-03-06 10:29
À : ALGONQUIANA at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG<mailto:ALGONQUIANA at LISTSERV.LINGUISTLIST.ORG>
Objet : Re: pointing, not with finger
Dia dhaoibh, a chairde!
Definitely had this pointed out to me by Penobscots; not sure how it may be among the Passamaquoddies, but it rings a bell there, too. No clue as to why, though pointing with the lips (= the acceptable and common strategy) is also common in Australia, I'm told. I might imagine that, other society/culture/belief-system factors aside, being well trained not to point with your hands helps in hunting, since the game-spooking motion is far less salient. But that's just pure speculation on my part.
Till later, keep safe and sane.
Slán,
bhur gcara
On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 8:54 AM, Amy Dahlstrom <a-dahlstrom at uchicago.edu<mailto:a-dahlstrom at uchicago.edu>> wrote:
Hello Algonquianists,
I'm a discussant at an upcoming conference on gesture, and one thing I thought I would mention to the (extremely diverse) audience is the practice among at least some of the Algonquian peoples of pointing with the lips or with the chin, rather than pointing with the finger.
I would like to ask you all how widespread this practice is. And for native speakers (native pointers? :-) ), do you have any intuitions about why pointing with the finger is avoided? Would it seem rude to point with the finger? Or inappropriate in some other way?
thanks in advance for any thoughts you can share!
Amy
P.S. if you hit "reply" remember that you are replying to the whole list! :-)
--
Margaret Noori
Director, Comprehensive Studies Program
University of Michigan
1111 Angell Hall
435 S. State St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1003
www.lsa.umich.edu/csp/<http://www.lsa.umich.edu/csp/>
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