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OverviewMother and infant negotiate over food; two high-status males jockey for power; female kin band together to get their way. It happens among humans and it happens among our closest living relatives in the animal kingdom, the great apes of Africa. In this eye-opening book, we see precisely how such events unfold in chimpanzees, bonobos, and gorillas: through a spontaneous, mutually choreographed dance of actions, gestures, and vocalizations in which social partners create meaning and come to understand each other. Using dynamic systems theory, an approach employed to study human communication, Barbara King is able to demonstrate the genuine complexity of apes' social communication, and the extent to which their interactions generate meaning. As King describes, apes create meaning primarily through their body movements--and go well beyond conveying messages about food, mating, or predators. Readers come to know the captive apes she has observed, and others across Africa as well, and to understand ""the process of creating social meaning."" This new perspective not only acquaints us with our closest living relatives, but informs us about a possible pathway for the evolution of language in our own species. King's theory challenges the popular idea that human language is instinctive, with rules and abilities hardwired into our brains. Rather, The Dynamic Dance suggests, language has its roots in the gestural ""building up of meaning"" that was present in the ancestor we shared with the great apes, and that we continue to practice to this day. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Barbara J. KingPublisher: Harvard University Press Imprint: Harvard University Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.478kg ISBN: 9780674015159ISBN 10: 0674015150 Pages: 304 Publication Date: 30 November 2004 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of Contents1. Social Communication as Dance 2. Gesture and Dynamic Systems Theory 3. Gesture in Captive African Great Apes 4. Gesture in Wild African Great Apes 5. The Evolution of Gesture 6. Imagined Futures Notes Bibliography Acknowledgments IndexReviewsIn this most important book Barbara King asks us to rethink many of our most basic assumptions about communication in great apes, their social lives, and their cognitive abilities. Rather than focusing on individual displays, she argues persuasively for the detailed study of how multiple animals construct action together through continuous, and quite subtle, co-regulation. Very young infants, through activities as mundane and pervasive as working with adults to be carried, enter a social world in which they quickly learn that their body movements are being organized with reference to the embodied behavior of others. The Dynamic Dance offers a detailed picture of a a primordial form of sociality in which meaning and consequential social action are constructed not by a single individual but instead interactively through embodied multiparty, multimodal sequences of action. The book correctly refuses to place special emphasis on a limited class of behaviors that might seem to shed light on human cognition and language. Indeed I find the call for more detailed study of Mother-Infant Behaviors, and of whatever activities the animals themselves treat as relevant, most important. Precisely by doing this The Dynamic Dance sheds crucial light on the social matrix within which sign systems such as human language, evolved. I found a deep resonance with her approach and my own research on how utterances are constructed not by a speaker alone, but rather through sequences of interaction in which the embodied displays of hearers and speakers, the contingent participation frameworks that they constantly renegotiate, play a crucial role, and can in fact lead to a reshaping of emerging sentences. This is a most original and important book that should be of interest to anyone interested in how primates build meaning and action in concert with each other.--Charles Goodwin, UCLA In this most important book Barbara King asks us to rethink many of our most basic assumptions about communication in great apes, their social lives, and their cognitive abilities. Rather than focusing on individual displays, she argues persuasively for the detailed study of how multiple animals construct action together through continuous, and quite subtle, co-regulation. Very young infants, through activities as mundane and pervasive as working with adults to be carried, enter a social world in which they quickly learn that their body movements are being organized with reference to the embodied behavior of others. The Dynamic Dance offers a detailed picture of a a primordial form of sociality in which meaning and consequential social action are constructed not by a single individual but instead interactively through embodied multiparty, multimodal sequences of action. The book correctly refuses to place special emphasis on a limited class of behaviors that might seem to shed light on human cognition and language. Indeed I find the call for more detailed study of Mother-Infant Behaviors, and of whatever activities the animals themselves treat as relevant, most important. Precisely by doing this The Dynamic Dance sheds crucial light on the social matrix within which sign systems such as human language, evolved. I found a deep resonance with her approach and my own research on how utterances are constructed not by a speaker alone, but rather through sequences of interaction in which the embodied displays of hearers and speakers, the contingent participation frameworks that they constantly renegotiate, play a crucial role, and can in fact lead to a reshaping of emerging sentences. This is a most original and important book that should be of interest to anyone interested in how primates build meaning and action in concert with each other.--Charles Goodwin, Ucla Author InformationBarbara J. King is Chancellor Professor of Anthropology, Emerita, at the College of William and Mary. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |