- William Stokoe
Dr. William C. Stokoe, Jr. (pronounced "STOH-kee" IPAEng|ˈstoʊki) William Stokoe (New Hampshire, 21 July 1919 – Chevy Chase (Maryland), 4 April 2000) was a
scholar who researchedAmerican Sign Language (ASL) extensively while he worked atGallaudet University . He coined the termcherology , the equivalent ofphonology for sign language (but sign language linguists, of which he may have been the first, now generally use the term "phonology").From 1955 to 1970 he served as a professor and chairman of the English department at Gallaudet. He published "Sign Language Structure" [http://jdsde.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/10/1/3/] and co-authored "A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles" (1965).
Through the publication of his work he was instrumental in changing the perception of ASL from that of a broken or simplified version of English to that of a complex and thriving natural language in its own right with an independent syntax and grammar as functional and powerful as any found in the spoken languages of the world. Because he raised the prestige of ASL in academic and educational circles, he is considered a hero in the Deaf community.
Writing system for American Sign Language
Stokoe invented a written notation for sign language (now called
Stokoe notation ) as ASL had no written form at the time. UnlikeSignWriting , which was developed later, it is not pictographic, but drew heavily on the Latin alphabet.Thus the written form of the sign for 'mother' looks like : ͜ 5x The ' ͜ ' indicates that it is signed at the chin, the '5' that is uses a spread hand (the '5' of ASL), and the 'x' that the thumb "touches" the chin. Stokoe coined the terms "tab", "dez", and "sig", meaning sign location, handshape and motion, to indicate different categories of
phoneme s in ASL. The Stokoe notation system has been used for other sign languages, but is mostly restricted to linguists and academics.References
* Maher, Jane Seeing in Sign: The Works of William Stokoe ISBN 156368053X
* Stokoe, William Language in Hand ISBN 156368103XExternal links
http://gupress.gallaudet.edu/Stokoecompliments.html
http://deafwiki.org/index.php?title=William_Stokoe
http://gupress.gallaudet.edu/Stokoeletter.htmlReferences
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