How Language Began : Gesture and Speech in Human Evolution / David McNeill.
Material type: TextSeries: Approaches to the Evolution of Language | Approaches to the Evolution of LanguagePublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2012Description: 1 online resource (280 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781139108669 (ebook)
- 401 23
- P116 .M455 2012
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 04 Apr 2016).
Human language is not the same as human speech. We use gestures and signs to communicate alongside, or instead of, speaking. Yet gestures and speech are processed in the same areas of the human brain, and the study of how both have evolved is central to research on the origins of human communication. Written by one of the pioneers of the field, this is the first book to explain how speech and gesture evolved together into a system that all humans possess. Nearly all theorizing about the origins of language either ignores gesture, views it as an add-on or supposes that language began in gesture and was later replaced by speech. David McNeill challenges the popular 'gesture-first' theory that language first emerged in a gesture-only form and proposes a groundbreaking theory of the evolution of language which explains how speech and gesture became unified.
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