Bookmark

Three hierarchical positions of deictic gesture in relation to spoken language: a multimodal interaction analysis

Norris,Sigrid
Visual Communication , Volume 10 (2): 129 SAGEMay 1, 2011

Preview Only

Three hierarchical positions of deictic gesture in relation to spoken language: a multimodal interaction analysis

Abstract

Taking the action, rather than the utterance or the text, as the unit of analysis, this article isolates different modes, investigating the interdependent relationships, illustrating that the visual mode of gestures can take up a hierarchically equal or a super-ordinate position in addition to the commonly understood sub-ordinate position in relation to the mode of spoken language. Building on McNeill, Birdwhistell, Eco, and Ekman and Friesen, and using a multimodal interaction analytical approach (Norris), I analyse in detail three separate everyday (inter)actions in which a deictic gesture is being performed and spoken language is used by the social actor performing the gesture. With these examples, I build on previous work in multimodal analysis of texts and multimodal interaction analysis, illustrating that the verbal is not necessarily more important than the visual (Kress and Van Leeuwen; Norris; Scollon), demonstrating that verbal and visual modes can be utilized together to (co)produce one message (Van Leeuwen), and showing that a mode utilized by a social actor producing a higher-level discourse structure hierarchically supersedes other modes in interaction (Norris).
Loading next page...
1 Page

Preview Only. This article cannot be rented because we do not currently have permission from the publisher.

 
/lp/sage/three-hierarchical-positions-of-deictic-gesture-in-relation-to-spoken-e5hENBRSwF
Title
Three hierarchical positions of deictic gesture in relation to spoken language: a multimodal interaction analysis
Author(s)
Norris,Sigrid
Journal
Visual Communication , Volume 10 (2): 129 SAGE – May 1, 2011
Publisher
Sage Publications
Copyright
Copyright © 2011 by SAGE Publications
ISSN
1470-3572
eISSN
1741-3214
D.O.I.
10.1177/1470357211398439
Publisher site
Get PDF