signs in different cultures
Valerie Sutton
sutton at SIGNWRITING.ORG
Tue Jan 17 04:04:45 UTC 2006
SignWriting List
January 16, 2006
Liz Harvey wrote:
>> I also have a question: I have noticed that (being the cultural
>> animals that we are), people from other cultures are adapting the
>> SignWriting system to work with their native sign languages. If
>> this is indeed the case, won't signs change from culture to
>> culture? In other words, won't the same sign in ASL possibly mean
>> something different in Dutch sign language?
>> Does that not impede the international utility of the SignWriting
>> system? What I particularly liked was the idea that one system
>> could be read world- wide, but if people are changing the meaning
>> of the symbols, does that not negate some of its universal benefits?
This is a misunderstanding of what SignWriting is....
SignWriting is not a language itself. It is an alphabet that writes
body movement. So it writes the way the body looks when we sign. But
signed languages themselves have existed for centuries, and will
exist whether we write them or not...So we are not changing any
language that already exists. We are just writing the way the body
looks, when people use those already established Sign Languages...
People who know those languages will know what those movements mean,
because they have been signing them all their lives, with their Deaf
parents, their Deaf friends, their teachers and students...
So what has SignWriting done? It has given a whole group of
languages...namely Sign Languages...a way to be written on paper. For
the first time, signers can write a message in the Sign Language they
know, to another person who knows that Sign Language, and they can
understand each other, without having to see them in person...
That is what A, and B and C does...A,B and C are not languages
themselves...they are just symbols that represent sounds that are
then applied to writing a whole group of European spoken
languages...so A, B and C do not carry meaning in themselves...they
just record the way something is pronounced and then those people who
know that spoken language, like English or French or German...they
will know what the words mean because they already speak the language...
Sorry for being so long winded!
Val ;-)
Valerie Sutton
Sutton at SignWriting.org
1. SignWriting
http://www.SignWriting.org
Read & Write Sign Languages
2. SignBank
http://www.SignBank.org
Sign Language Database Software
3. SignPuddle
http://www.SignBank.org/signpuddle
Create Signs in SignWriting Online!
4. MovementWriting
http://www.MovementWriting.org
Read & Write ALL Body Movement
5. DanceWriting
http://www.DanceWriting.org
Read & Write Dance Choreography
6. SportsWriting
http://www.MovementWriting.org/sports
Read & Write Different Kinds of Sports
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