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The Resilience of Language

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What Gesture Creation in Deaf Children Can Tell Us about how All Children Learn Language

Authors: Susan Goldin-Meadow

Publisher: Taylor & Francis · Published: 2003

Pages: 262

Categories: Family & Relationships / Children with Special Needs, Language Arts & Disciplines / Linguistics / General, Language Arts & Disciplines / Linguistics / Psycholinguistics / General, Language Arts & Disciplines / Linguistics / Psycholinguistics / Language Acquisition, Language Arts & Disciplines / Literacy, Psychology / General, Psychology / Developmental / Child, Psychology / Cognitive Psychology & Cognition, Psychology / Movements / General

Description

Imagine a child who has never seen or heard any language at all. Would such a child be able to invent a language on her own? Despite what one might guess, the children described in this book make it clear that the answer to this question is 'yes'. The children are congenitally deaf and cannot learn the spoken language that surrounds them. In addition, they have not yet been exposed to sign language, either by their hearing parents or their oral schools. Nevertheless, the children use their hands to communicate - they gesture - and those gestures take on many of the forms and functions of language. The properties of language that we find in the deaf children's gestures are just those properties that do not need to be handed down from generation to generation, but can be reinvented by a child de novo - the resilient properties of language. This book suggests that all children, deaf or hearing, come to language-learning ready to develop precisely these language properties. In this way, studies of gesture creation in deaf children can show us the way that children themselves have a large hand in shaping how language is learned.

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