William Stokoe
Categories: English professors | American professors
William Stokoe (pronounced Stokie) (1919 - 2000) was a scholar who researched American Sign Language (ASL) extensively while he worked at Gallaudet University. From 1955 to 1970 he served as a professor and chairman of the English department at Gallaudet. He published Sign Language Structure and co-authored A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles (1965). He was instrumental in changing the perception of ASL from that of a broken or simplified version of English to that of a complex language in its own right with an independent grammar. Because he raised the prestige of ASL in academic and educational circles, he is considered a hero in the Deaf community.
Writing system for American Sign Language
Stokoe invented a written notation for sign language, as ASL had no written form at the time. Unlike SignWriting, which was developed later, it is not pictographic, but drew heavily on the Latin alphabet. Thus written form of the sign for the 'mother' looks like U5x. The 'U' indicates that it is signed at the chin, the '5' that is uses a spread hand (the '5' of ASL), and the 'x' that the thumb touches the chin. Stokoe coined the terms tab, dez, and sig, meaning sign locataion, handshape, and motion, to indicate different categories of phonemes in ASL. The Stokoe notation system has been used for other sign languages, but is mostly restricted to linguists and academics.
See Stokoe notation