Affiliation:
1. Monash University
2. Kennesaw State University
3. University of Zurich
4. Zurich University of Applied Sciences
5. University of Birmingham
Abstract
Abstract
This paper investigates gesture as a resource for marking politeness-related meanings. We asked 14 Korean and 14 Catalan
participants to retell a cartoon, once to an unknown superior and once to a close friend. Participants in both languages curtail gestures
when interacting with a socially distant superior. Speakers of both languages produced fewer gestures when addressing the superior, reduced their gesture space, decreased the encoding of manner, and reduced the use of
character-viewpoint gestures. We see the decrease in gesture frequency and the less frequent encoding of manner as indicators of
lower levels of iconicity when talking with status superiors. Curtailing gesture marks a less playful communicative context, and a more
serious and deferential persona. Altogether, our research speaks to the importance of politeness in gesture production, and the social
nature of gestures in human communication.
Publisher
John Benjamins Publishing Company
Subject
Linguistics and Language,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Communication,Cultural Studies
Cited by
10 articles.
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