The enchanting music of sign language | Christine Sun Kim

684,017 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.
0
15317
3683
00:19
It means to play softly.
1
19504
1789
00:22
If you're playing a musical instrument and you notice a "p" in the score,
2
22007
4163
00:26
you need to play softer.
3
26194
1623
00:28
Two p's -- even softer.
4
28120
2360
00:30
Four p's -- extremely soft.
5
30804
3155
00:38
This is my drawing of a p-tree,
6
38353
3403
00:41
which demonstrates
7
41780
1310
00:43
no matter how many thousands upon thousands of p's there may be,
8
43114
4489
00:47
you'll never reach complete silence.
9
47627
1933
00:50
That's my current definition of silence:
10
50477
2778
00:53
a very obscure sound.
11
53279
1849
00:56
I'd like to share a little bit
12
56976
1483
00:58
about the history of American Sign Language, ASL,
13
58483
3166
01:01
plus a bit of my own background.
14
61673
1688
01:05
French sign language was brought to America during the early 1800s,
15
65851
5216
01:11
and as time went by, mixed with local signs,
16
71091
4075
01:15
it evolved into the language we know today as ASL.
17
75190
3329
01:19
So it has a history of about 200 years.
18
79168
2597
01:23
I was born deaf,
19
83800
1708
01:27
and I was taught to believe that sound wasn't a part of my life.
20
87244
3535
01:32
And I believed it to be true.
21
92662
1835
01:37
Yet, I realize now that that wasn't the case at all.
22
97318
3523
01:41
Sound was very much a part of my life,
23
101272
2785
01:44
really, on my mind every day.
24
104081
1876
01:50
As a Deaf person living in a world of sound,
25
110483
3987
01:54
it's as if I was living in a foreign country,
26
114494
2920
01:57
blindly following its rules, customs, behaviors and norms
27
117438
4242
02:01
without ever questioning them.
28
121704
1611
02:13
So how is it that I understand sound?
29
133460
2470
02:18
Well, I watch how people behave and respond to sound.
30
138282
2944
02:22
You people are like my loudspeakers, and amplify sound.
31
142654
3622
02:26
I learn and mirror that behavior.
32
146300
2121
02:28
At the same time, I've learned that I create sound,
33
148782
2951
02:31
and I've seen how people respond to me.
34
151757
2157
02:34
Thus I've learned, for example ...
35
154600
1856
02:36
"Don't slam the door!"
36
156480
2639
02:40
"Don't make too much noise when you're eating from the potato-chip bag!"
37
160350
3397
02:43
(Laughter)
38
163771
1000
02:44
"Don't burp,
39
164795
1268
02:46
and when you're eating,
40
166087
1181
02:47
make sure you don't scrape your utensils on the plate."
41
167292
2842
02:50
All of these things I term "sound etiquette."
42
170158
2530
02:55
Maybe I think about sound etiquette
43
175927
2431
02:58
more than the average hearing person does.
44
178382
2214
03:01
I'm hyper-vigilant around sound.
45
181963
1956
03:07
And I'm always waiting in eager nervous anticipation
46
187463
3866
03:11
around sound, about what's to come next.
47
191353
2082
03:13
Hence, this drawing.
48
193459
1284
03:16
TBD, to be decided.
49
196280
2614
03:19
TBC, to be continued.
50
199724
2540
03:22
TBA, to be announced.
51
202819
1797
03:28
And you notice the staff --
52
208793
1866
03:30
there are no notes contained in the lines.
53
210683
2191
03:32
That's because the lines already contain sound
54
212898
3648
03:36
through the subtle smudges and smears.
55
216570
2331
03:40
In Deaf culture, movement is equivalent to sound.
56
220863
3379
03:49
This is a sign for "staff" in ASL.
57
229617
2684
03:52
A typical staff contains five lines.
58
232325
2492
03:55
Yet for me, signing it with my thumb sticking up like that
59
235904
2774
03:58
doesn't feel natural.
60
238702
1327
04:00
That's why you'll notice in my drawings, I stick to four lines on paper.
61
240053
3408
04:05
In the year 2008, I had the opportunity to travel to Berlin, Germany,
62
245199
3989
04:09
for an artist residency there.
63
249212
1769
04:12
Prior to this time, I had been working as a painter.
64
252041
2778
04:17
During this summer, I visited different museums and gallery spaces,
65
257020
4055
04:21
and as I went from one place to the next,
66
261099
1982
04:23
I noticed there was no visual art there.
67
263105
2319
04:26
At that time, sound was trending, and this struck me ...
68
266618
5267
04:31
there was no visual art,
69
271909
1978
04:33
everything was auditory.
70
273911
1507
04:37
Now sound has come into my art territory.
71
277482
2640
04:41
Is it going to further distance me from art?
72
281168
2648
04:45
I realized that doesn't have to be the case at all.
73
285800
2696
04:48
I actually know sound.
74
288520
1151
04:49
I know it so well
75
289695
2642
04:52
that it doesn't have to be something just experienced through the ears.
76
292361
3338
04:55
It could be felt tactually,
77
295723
2985
04:58
or experienced as a visual,
78
298732
1883
05:00
or even as an idea.
79
300639
1674
05:05
So I decided to reclaim ownership of sound
80
305048
3261
05:08
and to put it into my art practice.
81
308333
2114
05:13
And everything that I had been taught regarding sound,
82
313016
3579
05:16
I decided to do away with and unlearn.
83
316619
2734
05:21
I started creating a new body of work.
84
321099
2290
05:24
And when I presented this to the art community,
85
324961
2554
05:27
I was blown away with the amount of support and attention I received.
86
327539
3896
05:32
I realized:
87
332676
1366
05:35
sound is like money,
88
335669
3486
05:39
power, control --
89
339179
3172
05:42
social currency.
90
342375
1544
05:47
In the back of my mind, I've always felt that sound was your thing,
91
347782
3864
05:51
a hearing person's thing.
92
351670
1487
05:56
And sound is so powerful
93
356014
2475
05:58
that it could either disempower me and my artwork,
94
358513
3756
06:02
or it could empower me.
95
362293
2008
06:05
I chose to be empowered.
96
365138
1537
06:08
There's a massive culture around spoken language.
97
368969
3348
06:13
And just because I don't use my literal voice to communicate,
98
373233
5267
06:18
in society's eyes it's as if I don't have a voice at all.
99
378524
3752
06:24
So I need to work with individuals who can support me as an equal
100
384945
3918
06:28
and become my voice.
101
388887
1472
06:32
And that way, I'm able to maintain relevancy in society today.
102
392523
4242
06:36
So at school, at work and institutions,
103
396789
2422
06:39
I work with many different ASL interpreters.
104
399235
2324
06:43
And their voice becomes my voice and identity.
105
403254
3199
06:48
They help me to be heard.
106
408365
1705
06:54
And their voices hold value and currency.
107
414380
4163
07:04
Ironically, by borrowing out their voices,
108
424178
2338
07:06
I'm able to maintain a temporary form of currency,
109
426540
3821
07:10
kind of like taking out a loan with a very high interest rate.
110
430385
2982
07:18
If I didn't continue this practice,
111
438052
2097
07:20
I feel that I could just fade off into oblivion
112
440173
2833
07:23
and not maintain any form of social currency.
113
443030
2367
07:29
So with sound as my new art medium,
114
449488
2655
07:32
I delved into the world of music.
115
452167
1734
07:35
And I was surprised to see the similarities between music and ASL.
116
455089
3976
07:41
For example,
117
461186
1517
07:42
a musical note
118
462727
2352
07:45
cannot be fully captured and expressed on paper.
119
465103
3023
07:48
And the same holds true for a concept in ASL.
120
468783
3052
07:53
They're both highly spatial and highly inflected --
121
473610
4014
08:02
meaning that subtle changes
122
482213
2157
08:04
can affect the entire meaning
123
484394
2509
08:06
of both signs and sounds.
124
486927
1784
08:11
I'd like to share with you a piano metaphor,
125
491898
2222
08:14
to have you have a better understanding of how ASL works.
126
494144
2985
08:17
So, envision a piano.
127
497153
1558
08:20
ASL is broken down into many different grammatical parameters.
128
500299
3355
08:24
If you assign a different parameter to each finger as you play the piano --
129
504771
4060
08:28
such as facial expression, body movement,
130
508855
5005
08:33
speed, hand shape and so on,
131
513884
3772
08:37
as you play the piano --
132
517680
2208
08:39
English is a linear language,
133
519912
1837
08:41
as if one key is being pressed at a time.
134
521773
2805
08:44
However, ASL is more like a chord --
135
524602
3648
08:48
all 10 fingers need to come down simultaneously
136
528274
3384
08:51
to express a clear concept or idea in ASL.
137
531682
3622
08:57
If just one of those keys were to change the chord,
138
537548
4026
09:01
it would create a completely different meaning.
139
541598
2193
09:04
The same applies to music in regards to pitch, tone and volume.
140
544152
4274
09:12
In ASL, by playing around with these different grammatical parameters,
141
552518
3578
09:16
you can express different ideas.
142
556120
1693
09:17
For example, take the sign TO-LOOK-AT.
143
557837
1985
09:20
This is the sign TO-LOOK-AT.
144
560240
1708
09:24
I'm looking at you.
145
564699
1251
09:28
Staring at you.
146
568056
1300
09:29
(Laughter)
147
569380
1714
09:33
(Laughter)
148
573103
1297
09:35
Oh -- busted.
149
575733
2666
09:38
(Laughter)
150
578423
1150
09:41
Uh-oh.
151
581608
1171
09:45
What are you looking at?
152
585521
1414
09:49
Aw, stop.
153
589410
1328
09:50
(Laughter)
154
590762
1669
09:52
I then started thinking,
155
592455
1184
09:53
"What if I was to look at ASL through a musical lens?"
156
593663
2917
09:57
If I was to create a sign and repeat it over and over,
157
597011
3207
10:00
it could become like a piece of visual music.
158
600242
2389
10:04
For example, this is the sign for "day,"
159
604016
3636
10:07
as the sun rises and sets.
160
607676
2172
10:11
This is "all day."
161
611789
2340
10:16
If I was to repeat it and slow it down,
162
616416
3201
10:19
visually it looks like a piece of music.
163
619641
2165
10:24
All ... day.
164
624023
2459
10:27
I feel the same holds true for "all night."
165
627186
3898
10:33
"All night."
166
633776
1154
10:35
This is ALL-NIGHT, represented in this drawing.
167
635890
3235
10:42
And this led me to thinking about three different kinds of nights:
168
642501
3213
10:49
"last night,"
169
649827
1150
10:52
"overnight,"
170
652747
1152
10:57
(Sings) "all night long."
171
657549
2754
11:00
(Laughter)
172
660327
2261
11:07
I feel like the third one has a lot more musicality than the other two.
173
667861
3345
11:11
(Laughter)
174
671230
1151
11:13
This represents how time is expressed in ASL
175
673413
3035
11:16
and how the distance from your body can express the changes in time.
176
676472
4459
11:20
For example,
177
680955
1639
11:22
1H is one hand, 2H is two hand,
178
682618
3139
11:25
present tense happens closest and in front of the body,
179
685781
3230
11:29
future is in front of the body and the past is to your back.
180
689035
3437
11:36
So, the first example is "a long time ago."
181
696209
2831
11:40
Then "past,"
182
700209
1161
11:44
"used to"
183
704538
1693
11:46
and the last one, which is my favorite,
184
706255
2035
11:48
with the very romantic and dramatic notion to it,
185
708314
2626
11:50
"once upon a time."
186
710964
1589
11:52
(Laughter)
187
712577
1409
11:57
"Common time"
188
717962
2717
12:00
is a musical term
189
720703
1768
12:02
with a specific time signature of four beats per measure.
190
722495
3983
12:07
Yet when I see the word "common time,"
191
727614
1812
12:09
what automatically comes to mind for me is "at the same time."
192
729450
3156
12:13
So notice RH: right hand, LH: left hand.
193
733645
3211
12:17
We have the staff across the head and the chest.
194
737578
2619
12:20
[Head: RH, Flash claw]
195
740221
1182
12:21
[Common time]
196
741427
1250
12:22
[Chest: LH, Flash claw]
197
742701
1533
12:25
I'm now going to demonstrate a hand shape called the "flash claw."
198
745712
3098
12:30
Can you please follow along with me?
199
750722
1977
12:33
Everybody, hands up.
200
753723
1344
12:38
Now we're going to do it in both the head and the chest,
201
758776
2698
12:41
kind of like "common time" or at the same time.
202
761498
2374
12:47
Yes, got it.
203
767595
1301
12:49
That means "to fall in love" in International [Sign].
204
769329
2815
12:52
(Laughter)
205
772168
1877
12:54
International [Sign], as a note,
206
774069
1903
12:55
is a visual tool to help communicate
207
775996
2745
12:58
across cultures and sign languages around the world.
208
778765
2701
13:01
The second one I'd like to demonstrate is this --
209
781997
2286
13:04
please follow along with me again.
210
784307
1736
13:10
And now this.
211
790891
1150
13:17
This is "colonization" in ASL.
212
797358
2700
13:20
(Laughter)
213
800082
1404
13:23
Now the third --
214
803407
1271
13:24
please follow along again.
215
804702
1394
13:31
And again.
216
811072
1150
13:36
This is "enlightenment" in ASL.
217
816970
2508
13:39
So let's do all three together.
218
819502
1561
13:43
"Fall in love,"
219
823732
1157
13:45
"colonization"
220
825897
1169
13:47
and "enlightenment."
221
827845
1150
13:50
Good job, everyone.
222
830767
1150
13:51
(Laughter)
223
831941
1218
13:53
Notice how all three signs are very similar,
224
833183
2238
13:55
they all happen at the head and the chest,
225
835445
2097
13:57
but they convey quite different meanings.
226
837566
2222
13:59
So it's amazing to see how ASL is alive and thriving,
227
839812
3324
14:03
just like music is.
228
843160
1299
14:06
However, in this day and age,
229
846152
2826
14:09
we live in a very audio-centric world.
230
849002
2602
14:11
And just because ASL has no sound to it,
231
851628
3381
14:15
it automatically holds no social currency.
232
855033
2910
14:19
We need to start thinking harder about what defines social currency
233
859271
4738
14:24
and allow ASL to develop its own form of currency --
234
864033
3842
14:27
without sound.
235
867899
1165
14:30
And this could possibly be a step to lead to a more inclusive society.
236
870262
4688
14:38
And maybe people will understand
237
878291
2132
14:40
that you don't need to be deaf to learn ASL,
238
880447
3536
14:44
nor do you have to be hearing to learn music.
239
884007
2287
14:48
ASL is such a rich treasure
240
888891
2695
14:51
that I'd like you to have the same experience.
241
891610
2785
14:54
And I'd like to invite you to open your ears,
242
894419
2776
14:57
to open your eyes,
243
897219
1891
14:59
take part in our culture
244
899134
1711
15:00
and experience our visual language.
245
900869
2519
15:03
And you never know,
246
903412
1435
15:04
you might just fall in love with us.
247
904871
1740
15:06
(Applause)
248
906635
2058
15:08
Thank you.
249
908717
1162
15:10
Denise Kahler-Braaten: Hey, that's me.
250
910508
1901
15:12
(Applause)
251
912433
3398
About this website

This site will introduce you to YouTube videos that are useful for learning English. You will see English lessons taught by top-notch teachers from around the world. Double-click on the English subtitles displayed on each video page to play the video from there. The subtitles scroll in sync with the video playback. If you have any comments or requests, please contact us using this contact form.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7