"Brentari has written a lucid, engaging, and expert account of the
phonological structure of signed languages, providing an excellent
resource for linguists and psychologists, alike. Brentari's book is
essential reading for anyone interested in the abstract nature of
human language."
-- Karen Emmorey, The Salk Institute for Biological
Studies
This book is intended in part to provide linguists and cognitive
scientists who do not know sign language with a point of entry into
the study of sign language phonology. At the same time, it presents a
comprehensive theory of American Sign Language (ASL) phonology, while
reviewing and building on alternative theories. One claim of this
theoretical framework is that, because of sign language's
visual/gestural phonetic basis, the consonant-like units and
vowel-like units are expressed simultaneously with one another, rather
than sequentially as in spoken languages. A second claim is that
movements operate as the most basic prosodic units of the language.
The author is concerned to show both the similarities and differences
between signed and spoken languages, and to indicate some directions
for future work in cognitive science that can be derived from her
phonological model.
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