This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) language and multimodality. It shows how shifts in conceptual understandings of language use, moving from bilingualism to multilingualism and (trans)languaging, have resulted in the revitalisation of the concept of language repertoires. We discuss key assumptions and analytical developments that have shaped the sociolinguistic study of signed and spoken language multilingualism as separate from different strands of multimodality studies. In most multimodality studies, researchers focus on participants using one named spoken language within broader embodied human action. Thus while attending to multimodal communication, they do not attend to multil...
The multidisciplinary research presented in this paper focuses everyday life and social practices th...
Linguistic research has identified abstract properties that seem to be shared by all languages—such ...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
For years, the study of spoken languages, on the basis of written and then also oral productions, w...
Our understanding of the cognitive and neural underpinnings of language has traditionally been firml...
We look at Sign Multilingualism from several perspectives. Section 1.1 compares various branches of ...
This chapter provides an overview over current debates about multilingual and post-multilingual inte...
Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiot...
Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken l...
Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiot...
This volume shares findings and innovations from the MULTISIGN project ("Multilingual behaviour in s...
When people draw on the available modal resources (e.g. gestures) in specific contexts over time, th...
In this chapter, we present a plea for a stronger inclusion of two strands of research in Cognitive ...
What is multilingualism? How has our understanding of multilingualism, language learning and develop...
The multidisciplinary research presented in this paper focuses everyday life and social practices th...
Linguistic research has identified abstract properties that seem to be shared by all languages—such ...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...
This paper presents a critical examination of key concepts in the study of (signed and spoken) langu...
For years, the study of spoken languages, on the basis of written and then also oral productions, w...
Our understanding of the cognitive and neural underpinnings of language has traditionally been firml...
We look at Sign Multilingualism from several perspectives. Section 1.1 compares various branches of ...
This chapter provides an overview over current debates about multilingual and post-multilingual inte...
Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiot...
Reformulation is remarkably frequent in discourse and has been the subject of much work in spoken l...
Signers and speakers coordinate a broad range of intentionally expressive actions within the spatiot...
This volume shares findings and innovations from the MULTISIGN project ("Multilingual behaviour in s...
When people draw on the available modal resources (e.g. gestures) in specific contexts over time, th...
In this chapter, we present a plea for a stronger inclusion of two strands of research in Cognitive ...
What is multilingualism? How has our understanding of multilingualism, language learning and develop...
The multidisciplinary research presented in this paper focuses everyday life and social practices th...
Linguistic research has identified abstract properties that seem to be shared by all languages—such ...
This chapter provides a rationale for a multimodal perspective on meaning, communication and discou...