Nose-pointing

Author:

Cooperrider Kensy1,Núñez Rafael2

Affiliation:

1. University of Chicago

2. University of California, San Diego

Abstract

This article describes a previously undocumented deictic facial gesture of Papua New Guinea, which we call nose-pointing. Based on a video corpus of examples produced by speakers of Yupno, an indigenous language of Papua New Guinea’s Finisterre Range, we characterize the gesture’s morphology — which involves an effortful scrunching together of the face, or S-action, in combination with a deictic head movement — and illustrate its use in different interactive contexts. Yupno speakers produce the nose-pointing gesture in alternation with more familiar pointing morphologies, such as index finger and head-pointing, suggesting that the gesture carries a distinctive meaning. Interestingly, the facial morphological component of nose-pointing — the S-action — is also widely used non-deictically by Yupno speakers, and we propose that such uses provide crucial clues to the meaning of nose-pointing. We conclude by highlighting questions for further research, including precisely how nose-pointing relates to non-deictic uses of the S-action and what cultural and communicative pressures might have shaped the gesture.

Publisher

John Benjamins Publishing Company

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Communication,Cultural Studies

Cited by 36 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Emblems: Meaning at the interface of language and gesture;Glossa: a journal of general linguistics;2024-06-18

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3. Indexicality, Deixis, and Space in Gesture;The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies;2024-04-18

4. Iconicity, Schematicity, and Representation in Gesture;The Cambridge Handbook of Gesture Studies;2024-04-18

5. Just visual context or part of the gesture? The role of arm orientation in bent pointing interpretation;Acta Psychologica;2023-11

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