ASL and SEE - a continuum?
In the past couple months, I have been watching an increasing number of vlogs with variable hit rate on comprehension. At the same time I am studying a couple books, one which delves heavily into ASL syntax.
One thing I notice is that there SEEMS to be quite a bit of acceptable syntax variability between signers. Do signers all fall somewhere on a continuum between ASL and SEE? Or is there a certain amount of variability between ASL signers and a huge chasm between ASL and SEE? (i.e. two distinct groups with variability within themselves only)
Maybe an example. Seek Geo's Hell's Kitchen recaps seem to me to be in a somewhat English word-order. Do I just notice this because he captions his vlogs and my high comprehension of his ASL then seems to come more easily/naturally to me?
I'm really confused here. Can't wait for my ASL class to start in 5 weeks!
One thing I notice is that there SEEMS to be quite a bit of acceptable syntax variability between signers. Do signers all fall somewhere on a continuum between ASL and SEE? Or is there a certain amount of variability between ASL signers and a huge chasm between ASL and SEE? (i.e. two distinct groups with variability within themselves only)
Maybe an example. Seek Geo's Hell's Kitchen recaps seem to me to be in a somewhat English word-order. Do I just notice this because he captions his vlogs and my high comprehension of his ASL then seems to come more easily/naturally to me?
I'm really confused here. Can't wait for my ASL class to start in 5 weeks!
Comments
Let me know what you think..
Very nice indeed. I definitely want to learn ASL as opposed to SEE, which is why I chose my books/class very carefully.
While I find learning signs in a dictionary format easiest, I find it far easier to watch vlogs for syntax and style. I just want to make sure I am imitating the right people =)
A professor of mine once lectured about reading various authors and the effect it has on your writing style. Basically, if you only ever read Clancy, your style will tend to be like his (not a horrible thing). Reading a broad variety of authors will give you more balance, though.
Good post! Well, I sign ASL and honestly I don't know if anyone can be 100% ASL signer since a few of PSL/SEE signs are acceptable to use (anyone feel free to correct me cuz I am not 100% sure on that one).
Anyways, as for captions, I always try to make it english as much as I can to make everyone to understand.
If I caption in ASL, it won't be easy to read.
Hope that helps? :-D
By the way, Jon's video about Bully ASL turned out FANTASTIC!! I loved it.
-SG
Last comment was by me not Jes, accidentally signed wrong account.
-SG
so do you think ASL/SEE is just a single continuum where everyone falls somewhere? or are there two groups that clump together towards the ends?
I really appreciate the English captions. I think I am far enough along now that I could *probably* decipher ASL captions but it would be rough. hehe.
cheers
aaron
learning ASL is a very large challenge, and if I put forth this much effort, I want to end up knowing the language, not butchering it, because I respect it =)
Judy