The enchanting music of sign language | Christine Sun Kim

687,454 views ・ 2015-11-19

TED


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

00:15
Interpreter: Piano, "p," is my favorite musical symbol.
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It means to play softly.
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If you're playing a musical instrument and you notice a "p" in the score,
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you need to play softer.
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Two p's -- even softer.
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Four p's -- extremely soft.
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This is my drawing of a p-tree,
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which demonstrates
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no matter how many thousands upon thousands of p's there may be,
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you'll never reach complete silence.
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That's my current definition of silence:
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a very obscure sound.
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I'd like to share a little bit
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about the history of American Sign Language, ASL,
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plus a bit of my own background.
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French sign language was brought to America during the early 1800s,
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and as time went by, mixed with local signs,
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it evolved into the language we know today as ASL.
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So it has a history of about 200 years.
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I was born deaf,
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and I was taught to believe that sound wasn't a part of my life.
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And I believed it to be true.
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Yet, I realize now that that wasn't the case at all.
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Sound was very much a part of my life,
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really, on my mind every day.
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As a Deaf person living in a world of sound,
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it's as if I was living in a foreign country,
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blindly following its rules, customs, behaviors and norms
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without ever questioning them.
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So how is it that I understand sound?
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Well, I watch how people behave and respond to sound.
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You people are like my loudspeakers, and amplify sound.
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I learn and mirror that behavior.
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At the same time, I've learned that I create sound,
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and I've seen how people respond to me.
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Thus I've learned, for example ...
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"Don't slam the door!"
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"Don't make too much noise when you're eating from the potato-chip bag!"
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(Laughter)
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"Don't burp,
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and when you're eating,
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make sure you don't scrape your utensils on the plate."
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All of these things I term "sound etiquette."
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Maybe I think about sound etiquette
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more than the average hearing person does.
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I'm hyper-vigilant around sound.
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And I'm always waiting in eager nervous anticipation
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around sound, about what's to come next.
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Hence, this drawing.
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TBD, to be decided.
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TBC, to be continued.
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TBA, to be announced.
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And you notice the staff --
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there are no notes contained in the lines.
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That's because the lines already contain sound
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through the subtle smudges and smears.
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In Deaf culture, movement is equivalent to sound.
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This is a sign for "staff" in ASL.
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A typical staff contains five lines.
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Yet for me, signing it with my thumb sticking up like that
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doesn't feel natural.
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That's why you'll notice in my drawings, I stick to four lines on paper.
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In the year 2008, I had the opportunity to travel to Berlin, Germany,
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for an artist residency there.
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Prior to this time, I had been working as a painter.
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During this summer, I visited different museums and gallery spaces,
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and as I went from one place to the next,
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I noticed there was no visual art there.
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At that time, sound was trending, and this struck me ...
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there was no visual art,
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everything was auditory.
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Now sound has come into my art territory.
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Is it going to further distance me from art?
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I realized that doesn't have to be the case at all.
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I actually know sound.
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I know it so well
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that it doesn't have to be something just experienced through the ears.
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It could be felt tactually,
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or experienced as a visual,
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or even as an idea.
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So I decided to reclaim ownership of sound
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and to put it into my art practice.
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And everything that I had been taught regarding sound,
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I decided to do away with and unlearn.
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I started creating a new body of work.
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And when I presented this to the art community,
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I was blown away with the amount of support and attention I received.
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I realized:
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sound is like money,
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power, control --
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social currency.
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In the back of my mind, I've always felt that sound was your thing,
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a hearing person's thing.
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And sound is so powerful
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that it could either disempower me and my artwork,
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or it could empower me.
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I chose to be empowered.
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There's a massive culture around spoken language.
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And just because I don't use my literal voice to communicate,
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in society's eyes it's as if I don't have a voice at all.
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So I need to work with individuals who can support me as an equal
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and become my voice.
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And that way, I'm able to maintain relevancy in society today.
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So at school, at work and institutions,
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I work with many different ASL interpreters.
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And their voice becomes my voice and identity.
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They help me to be heard.
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And their voices hold value and currency.
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Ironically, by borrowing out their voices,
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I'm able to maintain a temporary form of currency,
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kind of like taking out a loan with a very high interest rate.
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If I didn't continue this practice,
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I feel that I could just fade off into oblivion
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and not maintain any form of social currency.
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So with sound as my new art medium,
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I delved into the world of music.
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And I was surprised to see the similarities between music and ASL.
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For example,
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a musical note
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cannot be fully captured and expressed on paper.
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And the same holds true for a concept in ASL.
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They're both highly spatial and highly inflected --
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meaning that subtle changes
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can affect the entire meaning
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of both signs and sounds.
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I'd like to share with you a piano metaphor,
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to have you have a better understanding of how ASL works.
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So, envision a piano.
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ASL is broken down into many different grammatical parameters.
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If you assign a different parameter to each finger as you play the piano --
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such as facial expression, body movement,
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speed, hand shape and so on,
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as you play the piano --
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English is a linear language,
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as if one key is being pressed at a time.
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However, ASL is more like a chord --
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all 10 fingers need to come down simultaneously
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to express a clear concept or idea in ASL.
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If just one of those keys were to change the chord,
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it would create a completely different meaning.
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The same applies to music in regards to pitch, tone and volume.
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In ASL, by playing around with these different grammatical parameters,
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you can express different ideas.
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For example, take the sign TO-LOOK-AT.
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This is the sign TO-LOOK-AT.
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I'm looking at you.
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Staring at you.
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(Laughter)
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(Laughter)
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Oh -- busted.
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(Laughter)
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Uh-oh.
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What are you looking at?
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Aw, stop.
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(Laughter)
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I then started thinking,
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"What if I was to look at ASL through a musical lens?"
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If I was to create a sign and repeat it over and over,
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it could become like a piece of visual music.
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For example, this is the sign for "day,"
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as the sun rises and sets.
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This is "all day."
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If I was to repeat it and slow it down,
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visually it looks like a piece of music.
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All ... day.
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I feel the same holds true for "all night."
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"All night."
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This is ALL-NIGHT, represented in this drawing.
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And this led me to thinking about three different kinds of nights:
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"last night,"
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"overnight,"
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(Sings) "all night long."
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(Laughter)
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I feel like the third one has a lot more musicality than the other two.
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(Laughter)
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This represents how time is expressed in ASL
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and how the distance from your body can express the changes in time.
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For example,
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1H is one hand, 2H is two hand,
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present tense happens closest and in front of the body,
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future is in front of the body and the past is to your back.
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So, the first example is "a long time ago."
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Then "past,"
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"used to"
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and the last one, which is my favorite,
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with the very romantic and dramatic notion to it,
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"once upon a time."
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(Laughter)
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"Common time"
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is a musical term
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with a specific time signature of four beats per measure.
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Yet when I see the word "common time,"
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what automatically comes to mind for me is "at the same time."
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So notice RH: right hand, LH: left hand.
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We have the staff across the head and the chest.
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[Head: RH, Flash claw]
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[Common time]
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[Chest: LH, Flash claw]
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I'm now going to demonstrate a hand shape called the "flash claw."
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Can you please follow along with me?
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Everybody, hands up.
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Now we're going to do it in both the head and the chest,
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kind of like "common time" or at the same time.
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Yes, got it.
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That means "to fall in love" in International [Sign].
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(Laughter)
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International [Sign], as a note,
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is a visual tool to help communicate
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across cultures and sign languages around the world.
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The second one I'd like to demonstrate is this --
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please follow along with me again.
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And now this.
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This is "colonization" in ASL.
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(Laughter)
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Now the third --
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please follow along again.
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And again.
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This is "enlightenment" in ASL.
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So let's do all three together.
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"Fall in love,"
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"colonization"
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and "enlightenment."
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Good job, everyone.
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(Laughter)
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Notice how all three signs are very similar,
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they all happen at the head and the chest,
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but they convey quite different meanings.
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So it's amazing to see how ASL is alive and thriving,
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just like music is.
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However, in this day and age,
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we live in a very audio-centric world.
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And just because ASL has no sound to it,
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it automatically holds no social currency.
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We need to start thinking harder about what defines social currency
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and allow ASL to develop its own form of currency --
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without sound.
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And this could possibly be a step to lead to a more inclusive society.
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And maybe people will understand
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that you don't need to be deaf to learn ASL,
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nor do you have to be hearing to learn music.
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ASL is such a rich treasure
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that I'd like you to have the same experience.
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And I'd like to invite you to open your ears,
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to open your eyes,
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take part in our culture
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and experience our visual language.
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And you never know,
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you might just fall in love with us.
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(Applause)
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Thank you.
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Denise Kahler-Braaten: Hey, that's me.
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(Applause)
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