Providence Island Sign Language

Providence Island Sign Language

language
name=Providence Island Sign Language
states=Colombia
region=Providence Island
signers=19 deaf signers, but known by the majority of the 2,500 population
family=Language isolate
iso2=sgn-CO-SAP|iso3=prz

Providence Island Sign Language (also known as "Providencia Sign Language") is the sign language used by the deaf community on the small island community of Providence Island in the Western Caribbean, off the coast of Nicaragua but belonging to Colombia. The island is about 15 square miles and the total population is about 2,500, of which a large number are deaf.

It is believed that the sign language emerged in the late 19th or early 20th century. Brief sociological studies have suggested that deaf people on the island are not regarded as inferior in the areas of marriage, mental ability, occupations, and social integration.

External links

* [http://www.uwm.edu/~wash/prov.htm Providence Island Sign Language] by William Washabaugh (1991)
* [http://www.ethnologue.com/show_language.asp?code=prz Ethnologue entry]

References

* Woodward, James. "Attitudes toward deaf people on Providence Island", Journal article in: Sign Language Studies 7:18 (1978), pp. 49-68
* Woodward, James. "Sign languages — Providence Island", in Gallaudet encyclopedia of deaf people and deafness. New York: McGraw-Hill, 1987., vol.3, pp. 103-104.
* Washabaugh, William; Woodward,James; DeSantis, Susan (1978): "Providence Island Sign: A Context-Dependent Language". In: Anthropological Linguistics, vol. 20, 95-109.


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