|
Details of Positions of Fingers
The signs of the Indians appear to consist
of motions more often than of positions—a fact enhancing the
difficulty both of their description and illustration—and
the motions when not designedly abbreviated are generally
large, free, and striking, seldom minute. It seems also to
be the general rule among Indians as among deaf-mutes that
the point of the finger is used to trace outlines and the
palm of the hand to describe surfaces. From an examination
of the identical signs made to each other for the same
object by Indians of the same tribe and band, they appear to
make many gestures with little regard to the position of the
fingers and to vary in such arrangement from individual
taste. Some of the elaborate descriptions, giving with great
detail the attitude of the fingers of any particular
gesturer and the inches traced by his motions, are of as
little necessity as would be, when quoting a written word, a
careful reproduction of the flourishes of tailed letters and
the thickness of down-strokes in individual chirography. The
fingers must be in some position, but that is frequently
accidental, not contributing to the general and essential
effect. An example may be given in the sign for white man
which Medicine Bull, infra, page 491, made by drawing
the palmar surface of the extended index across the
forehead, and in Lean Wolf's Complaint, infra, page
526, the same motion is made by the back of the thumb
pressed upon the middle joint of the index, fist closed. The
execution as well as the conception in both cases was the
indication of the line of the hat on the forehead, and the
position of the fingers in forming the line is altogether
immaterial. There is often also a custom or "fashion" in
which not only different tribes, but different persons in
the same tribe, gesture the same sign with different degrees
of beauty, for there is calligraphy in sign language, though
no recognized orthography. It is nevertheless better to
describe and illustrate with unnecessary minuteness than to
fail in reporting a real distinction. There are, also, in
fact, many signs formed by mere positions of the fingers,
some of which are abbreviations, but in others the
arrangement of the fingers in itself forms a picture. An
instance of the latter is one of the signs given for the
bear, viz.: Middle and third finger of right hand
clasped down by the thumb, fore and little finger extended
crooked downward. See Extracts from Dictionary, infra.
This reproduction, of the animals peculiar claws, with the
hand and in any position relative to the body, would suffice
without the pantomime of scratching in the air, which is
added only if the sign without it should not be at once
comprehended.
This site includes some historical
materials that may imply negative stereotypes reflecting the culture or
language of a particular period or place. These items are presented as
part of the historical record and should not be interpreted to mean that
the WebMasters in any way endorse the stereotypes implied.
Sign Language
Among North American Indians Compared with
that Among Other Peoples and Deaf-Mutes,
1881
Indian Sign
Language
Free
Genealogy |
Indian
Genealogy |
Indian Sign Language
|
|