AW: NEW: Clown correction
Adam Frost
icemandeaf at GMAIL.COM
Mon Sep 12 19:26:45 UTC 2011
I am not making an argument to explain everything, just the one sign for clown. And that comment about it looking like it is the left hand because it is on the left side is not my own, but readers. That is just how that writing came about. You are right that bug would have the same comment; however, bug has a contact where clown does not. It also still has the fingers bending to the left meaning it is the right hand. All that is besides the point. The question I have is how would you write clown if it isn't correct for you. I ask that out of true search for understanding, not argument. The only way I can understand why you might write differently is to do so.
I understand that you are using the thumb to determine how the hand symbol should be configured. If I were to follow that, then I would come to the same conclusion as you. However, I don't use the thumbs to determine that, rather I use the finger. Even still, I would like to see how you'd write clown.
Adam
On Sep 12, 2011, at 3:03 PM, "Charles Butler" <chazzer3332000 at YAHOO.COM> wrote:
> Adam, Stefan, Valerie, et al.
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> The fact that you and Valerie agree in what I must strongly DISAGREE is exactly the point. You have published, in a book, something that is counter-intuitive.
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> If you overlay the symbol on the hand it DOES NOT MATCH. No matter what you do, the THUMB is on the right not on the left.
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> I must respectfully disagree with you, Adam, and agree with Stefan and Mr. Parkhurst.
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> I follow the orientation of the hand first. Is it toward me or away from me.
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> If it is away from me, then the thumb MUST be on the actual hand as the photo is, but not as the drawing. If it looks awkward, I would put the hand directly over the face so that it would lay on top of it, which is the whole point of the clown face, it lays on top of the face, not to one side or the other. Then one can clearly see which hand it is, that the orientation is wrong.
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> Quoting your published notebook is EXACTLY the point. I disagree to the point that I would edit that textbook marking it wrong if it came across my publishing house in sign writing to publish. I did it in Brazil any number of times until they got the point. Don't make a sign identical with its mirror image, it simply ISN'T.
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> The fact that I rotate this same hand around and it now is exactly the same glyph when pointed in the opposite direction is just plain wrong. It is not a disagreement, it makes no logical sense, the grasp is happening in the opposite direction. You have rotated the hand, it cannot grasp left and right the same way. I have two hands, they are mirror images of each other. A grasp with one away must be the same glyph as the other pointed toward me.
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> I go for awkward writing and consistency every time. You showed that with "crumble". The hands are up there, and the thumbs are on the outside. You admit it there, so your argument is inconsistent.
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> You can write it in a textbook any way you want to, that does not make it any less WRONG. I cannot teach this, I cannot bend my mind around it. It does not make intuitive sense. Two orientations, no matter WHAT fingers are involved cannot be the same glyph.
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> I will continue to teach, and point out that the software is wrong. It is software, and it NEEDS to be fixed.
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> You are working with educators, and I think that the educators who are NOT just "shrug and make it go away" are on the better side. When they work with Deaf students in classrooms and get the same questions every day, I think the educators know more than the software.
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> If I were in your classroom, Adam, I would contradict you at every "turn" as it is not logical and I cannot bring myself to write what is simply wrong. I would strongly disagree, and Valerie knows it. I don't buy the "grasp" logic as I'd rather write the sign on the opposite side.
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> If the sign for Clown, Cockroach and Bug are compared, it is clear that COCKROACH (written by me) shows the right hand on the left side of the body, with the correct orientation, it is still the right hand, rotated 45 degrees with the left hand rotated 45 degrees and the hands crossed. BUG is the right hand at the halfway point so that the thumb presses the nose (written by VALERIE using her own textbook notes to move the hand until the features line up) so your argument simply does not hold water.
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> When the inventor of the system has to put the right hand on the left side of the body so that a simple orientation rule does not get violated, I think that the orientation we have proposed is the better one. She makes sure that the thumb STAYS on the right place, sticking out so it should stay there.
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> Charles
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> --- On Mon, 9/12/11, Stefan Wöhrmann <stefanwoehrmann at GOOGLEMAIL.COM> wrote:
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> From: Stefan Wöhrmann <stefanwoehrmann at GOOGLEMAIL.COM>
> Subject: AW: NEW: Clown correction
> To: SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU
> Date: Monday, September 12, 2011, 2:08 PM
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> Hi Charles, Valerie, Adam and friends,
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> well – this has been a v e r y intense discussion in the past. From time to time it became an emotional discussion.
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> Now looking at your wonderful book about hand shapes and their matching symbols, I felt pretty much disappointed and confused to find some symbols with this kind of interpretation, violating my intuitive understanding of the “thumb-rule”
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> I do not agree with your idea of how the hand looks like. I do not follow your point of view.
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> Why ? Well Charles explained the point of view I understand best. And if you would look at the good old “Lessons in SignWriting” second edition page 36 you will understand – that at least some of us “old scribes” prefer the thumb to be seen where it belongs ... right thumb right side of the symbol.
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> The whole confusion is connected to the fact that originally there have been more but three basic orientations. I discussed it several times and have had a hard time to explain my doubts and ideas about different interpretations.
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> This discussion came up several times in the past. It is a pity that people feel frustrated to accept the use of symbols if it does not go along with their understanding. But I can understand the feeling of irritation. Personally I follow Valeries advice to write my documents the way I think it feels best to my understanding. And of course – I do no teach these symbols in question the way they are shown in this list because my brain refuses to accept the logic you try to explain. I simply do not see, what you would like me to see. I can’t – no matter how intense I try.
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> I agree that sometimes the fingers or the thumb on the right side touching the nose or the ear are somehow funny – but at least this kind of representation does not hurt the general concept: write what you see.
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> Personally I would not write the sign for clown with this “left hand” – smile (I understand that you – Adam and Valerie can see this hand as a “right hand” – but I cannot.
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> Same problem with some other symbols for hand shapes ;-( and this “direction of fingers is important”- idea – I do not agree with that either.
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> When I started to “learn” the meaning of SW-symbols 11 years ago, I followed the Parkhurst interpretation. It made absolute sense to me and everything seemed to be consistent.
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> So now we can restart to understand that there are at least two different “schools” to use some symbols differently. It might be worth to just have a table showing a given symbol from the two points of view – this would not blame anybody but give a chance to accept what is going on – We do not follow the same way of thinking.
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> Stefan
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> Von: SignWriting List: Read and Write Sign Languages [mailto:SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU] Im Auftrag von Adam Frost
> Gesendet: Montag, 12. September 2011 18:30
> An: SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU
> Betreff: Re: NEW: Clown correction
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> I'm assuming the sign you are referring to is:
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> <image001.gif>
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> While I personally don't do it with this down movement, we aren't talking about that at the moment. ;-)
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> Technically speaking, the hand symbol is the correct one for what the symbol was intended to mean. If you look at the book that Val and I just wrote, the image of my hand and the symbol match.
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> <image002.jpg>
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> I know that the thumb seems to be on the wrong side; so do the fingers. There is a reason for that. This isn't official because I need to test it, but from personal observation I have found that when a handshape has the thumb interacting with the other fingers (ie as if it can hold a physical object), the symbol construction points the fingers to the center of the body and is static and does not rotate like most of the other symbols. So this hand symbol falls in that category.
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> Now, my understanding is that there are some who say that these hand symbols should rotate just like the other symbols. That means this writing of clown should be:
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> <image003.gif>
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> The problem is that since the hand is on the left side of the face, many readers feel that is for the left hand as opposed to the right hand. That is the reason all those symbols were made static and not rotate like the rest.
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> I hope this helps clarify why the hand symbol used is actually not wrong.
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> Adam
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> On Sep 12, 2011, at 9:00 AM, Charles Butler wrote:
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> Please look at "CLOWN" on the ASL Sign Puddle.
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> The fingers point to the right and the hand is white, therefore it is the left hand, yet the arrows indicate the right hand. if you turn it at a slight angle then the thumb is clearly on the wrong side, pointing up the axle on the left side of the square. This, to me, is the easiest test.
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> If I were to see this sign in an ASL SW exam I would mark it wrong. This is not a matter of "variant" this is simply wrong.
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> If I cannot mark a test unambiguously then there is something wrong. The hand is not "pinching the nose" from the side it is "facing the nose".
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> As I can't edit it, I can't fix it.
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> Charles Butler
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