Nose-pointing

Gesture ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-129 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kensy Cooperrider ◽  
Rafael Núñez

This article describes a previously undocumented deictic facial gesture of Papua New Guinea, which we call nose-pointing. Based on a video corpus of examples produced by speakers of Yupno, an indigenous language of Papua New Guinea’s Finisterre Range, we characterize the gesture’s morphology — which involves an effortful scrunching together of the face, or S-action, in combination with a deictic head movement — and illustrate its use in different interactive contexts. Yupno speakers produce the nose-pointing gesture in alternation with more familiar pointing morphologies, such as index finger and head-pointing, suggesting that the gesture carries a distinctive meaning. Interestingly, the facial morphological component of nose-pointing — the S-action — is also widely used non-deictically by Yupno speakers, and we propose that such uses provide crucial clues to the meaning of nose-pointing. We conclude by highlighting questions for further research, including precisely how nose-pointing relates to non-deictic uses of the S-action and what cultural and communicative pressures might have shaped the gesture.

2020 ◽  
Vol 26 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-42
Author(s):  
Fred Wesley

Commentary: The Melanesian Media Freedom Forum (MMFF) notes democracy is in retreat and journalists like Victor Mambor (West Papua), Scott Waide (Papua New Guinea) and Dan McGarry (Vanuatu) are carrying the baton for media freedom. There has been a global reversal for a free press that has spanned countries in every region, including long-standing democracies like the United States and consolidated authoritarian regimes like China and Russia. The pattern has been consistent and ominous.


2015 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
pp. 175-199
Author(s):  
Christine Schreyer

In the Huon Gulf area of Papua New Guinea, the indigenous language Jabêm was one of the languages of first contact for Lutheran German Missionaries, circa 1900. As a result, Jabêm became a language of the church and, later, a language of education. In both domains, written materials were commonly produced and generations of children were schooled in Jabêm rather than their own mother tongues. This paper discusses the relationship between Jabêm and Kala, an indigenous language spoken in six villages along the Huon Gulf Coast. Kala was without a standard orthography until recent collaborations between members of the communities and researchers from UBC Okanagan. This paper, therefore, also describes the development of the Kala standardized orthography and examines the distinct influences Jabêm has in both spoken and written domains. For instance, Jabêm’s role as a written authority retains positive connotation, which influenced the newly created Kala orthography.


1984 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 113-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan Jorgensen

Among the Telefolmin, women's suicide is culturally recognized while men's suicides are held to be exceptional; despite this, more men commit suicide than women, a pattern contrary to cultural expectations. Analysis of motives reveals that men tend to commit suicide in the face of rupture in marital relations. An examination of concepts of male personhood demonstrates that the culturally enjoined requirement of self-restraint and emotional muting is suspended in husband-wife relations. From this point of view marriage affords a privileged relation in which a man's self is permitted to emerge, while marital disruption jeopardizes this emergent self. In such circumstances suicide is the final act in an already advanced process of destruction of the self.


Subject The political and economic outlook for Papua New Guinea. Significance Papua New Guinea (PNG) is due for its five-yearly national elections in mid-2017 and the outcome now appears much less certain than a year ago in the face of growing economic and political challenges. PNG’s central bank has effectively started printing money by purchasing government bonds not bought by the private sector. This foreshadows longer-term problems but will help hide PNG’s underlying cash crisis. Impacts A collapse in domestic revenues points to a severe economic contraction. The 2017 budget proposes a path to smaller deficits by 2021, but suffers from major errors and unrealistic assumptions. The central bank’s printing of money and suppression of the IMF report will damage international investor confidence.


2004 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
pp. 11-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Geoffrey B. Saxe ◽  
Indigo Esmonde

AbstractWe report two studies about shifting practices of quantification in tradestores in Oksapmin communities (Papua New Guinea). In Study 1, we enlisted 7 local tradestore clerks to collect information about customers' language practices of quantification, age cohort, schooling level, and cost of purchase. Analyses of 305 exchanges revealed that older cohorts tended to use indigenous practices and extensions of the indigenous language. Younger cohorts – particularly those with some schooling -- tended to use practices that involved Melanesian Pidgin. In Study 2, we analyze interviews with 9 tradestore clerks who described typical purchase transactions with customers from different age cohorts/schooling levels. Analyses of interviews revealed that elders tended to structure multi-item purchases into sequential transactions and use extensions of indigenous approaches to quantification. Schooled adults tended to purchase multiple items in a single transaction and use Pidgin quantifiers. We argue that tradestores today sustain multiple practices of quantification but also support change towards the exclusive use of Melanesian Pidgin.


Author(s):  
Donald Denoon ◽  
Kathleen Dugan ◽  
Leslie Marshall

1984 ◽  
Vol 29 (10) ◽  
pp. 786-788
Author(s):  
Patricia M. Greenfield

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