|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Volume 3, No. 1 January 2002Review NoteSandor S. Feldman (1959). Mannerisms of Speech and Gestures in Everyday LifeDavid McNeill (Ed.) (2000). Language and GestureJan Bremmer & Herman Rooddenburg (Eds.) (1991). A Cultural History of Gesture. From Antiquity to the Present DayJean-Claude Schmitt (1992). Die Logik der Gesten im europäischen MittelalterMichael B. Buchholz (Germany)Abstract: Language and gestures are traditionally viewed. New approaches try to combine them and see language and gesture as produced by interacting, and embodied minds challenge our understanding of what language is. I try to remind readers of the work by Sandor S. FELDMAN who as a psychoanalyst began to observe gestural manierisms of his patients and considered them a "window to the mind". This formulation than is used by psycholinguist McNEILL, editor of a volume focusing on this theme half a century later. However, gestures are is also embedded in cultural and historical contexts as well, to which the two other books by well known historians (SCHMITT, and BREMMER & ROODDENBURG) refer to. Keywords: language, gesture, embodiment, culture, history This contribution is only available as a full text in the German language. German text Last update: 01/30/2003 Volume 3, No. 1 Table of Contents [qualitative-research.net]
[Home] [Inside FQS] [Features]
[Services]
[Submission]
© 2002 Forum Qualitative Sozialforschung / Forum: Qualitative Social Research Supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
|