Warlpiri Sign Language
Warlpiri Sign Language | |
---|---|
Rdaka-rdaka | |
Region | North Central Desert, Australia |
Native speakers | None |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | – |
Glottolog | None |
Warlpiri Sign Language, also known as Rdaka-rdaka (lit. hand signs),[1] is a sign language used by the Warlpiri, an Aboriginal community in the central desert region of Australia. It is one of the most elaborate, and certainly the most studied, of all Australian Aboriginal sign languages.
Social context
While many neighbouring language groups such as
In Warlpiri communities, widows also tend to live away from their families, with other widows or young single women. As a result, it is typical for Warlpiri women to have a better command of the sign language than men, and among older women at Yuendumu, Warlpiri Sign Language is in constant use, whether they are under a speech ban or not.[2] However, all members of the community understand it, and may sign in situations where speech is undesirable, such as while hunting, in private communication, across distances, while ill, or for subjects that require a special reverence or respect. Many also use signs as an accompaniment to speech.
Linguistics
British linguist
See also
- Yolngu Sign Language
References
- ISBN 978-1-86892-603-9. Retrieved 29 March 2024.
- ^ Dail-Jones, M. A. (1984). A Culture in Motion: A Study of the Interrelationship of Dancing, Sorrowing, Hunting and Fighting as Performed by the Warlpiri Women of Central Australia. M.A. Thesis, University of Hawaii, Honolulu.
Further reading
- Wright, Cheryl D. (1980). Walpiri Hand Talk: An Illustrated Dictionary of Hand Signs used by the Walpiri People of Central Australia. Darwin: N.T. Department of Education. ISBN 9780642509772.
- ISBN 978-1-4684-2411-9.
- Kendon, Adam (1985). "Iconicity in Warlpiri Sign language". In Bouissac, Paul; Herzfeld, Michael; Posner, Roland (eds.). Inconicity: Essay on the Nature of Culture. Tübingen: Stauffenburger Verlag.
- JSTOR 40331045.
- ISBN 9780521360081.
- .
- JSTOR 3629797.
- Kendon, Adam (1985). "Variation in Central Australian Aboriginal Sign language: A preliminary report". Language in Central Australia. 1 (4): 1–11.
- .
- Mountford, Charles P. (1949), "Gesture language of the Walpari tribe, central Australia", Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia, vol. 73, pp. 100–101