History of sign language
Sign language has existed for many centuries. No one knows exactly when it was born, but it
is believed that it has been used since people have the need of communicating.
Sign Language was used by many cultures throughout history, even before it was turned into a
language with a structure itself (even though they differ from region to region). For
example, in America, the Great Plains Indians developed a fairly extensive system of
signing.
In the landing of Columbus to America, communication with aboriginal peoples was made
through sign language. Moreover, this language was used for intertribal communication or for
hunting purposes, but it had nothing to do with communication among deaf people.
So, how sign language was born? Let's take a look…
The origin of sign language
Although there is no definite position about its origin, according to Jerome D Schein, a
fundamental milestone was when hominids became erect, as their hands were freed for tool
using as well as communication. For this reason, some anthropologists regard the onset of
Homo erectus as a possible date for the beginning of sign language (about a hundred thousand
years ago).
Throughout human history, deaf people were excluded for being considered useless to society.
The Spartans used to throw people with physical disabilities from the mountains, and the
Romans into the Tiber River because it was believed that they were not useful for war.
During the Middle Ages, deaf people were confined in madhouses. They had no possibility of
entering temples or getting married.
According to the research carried out by Brook Larson and Dr Hallen “in the years before
Christ, Aristotle proclaimed that speech and language were one in the same and that those
who could not speak were unteachable. This pronouncement on the deaf cursed them for the
next two thousand years. They were denied citizenship, religious rights, and were often left
out to die or fend for themselves in the times of the ancient Greeks. Because of this, the
use of Sign was heavily looked down upon and shamed”.
The first educators of sign language
In the sixteenth century, during the time of the Renaissance, educators started questioning the
Aristotle's statement. The Italian physician Girolamo Cardano proclaimed that the mute could
"hear by reading and speak by writing".
At present, the Spanish monk Pedro Ponce de León is considered to have been the first educator
of deaf children although, there are theories that consider Vicente de Santo Domingo to have
been the first educator of deaf children. Ponce de León taught his students to write pointing
with his forefinger from his right hand the letters he held with his left hand (two-hand
alphabet), and then he showed the objects identified with their corresponding names; later, he
made them repeat with the manual method and write the words that belonged to the objects. In
1545, he started the first school for deaf people ever recorded in history.
In the 17th century, also in Spain, Juan de Pablo Bonet developed a language pedagogy for deaf
speakers. He was responsible for writing the first modern treatise on phonetics and speech
therapy "Summary of the letters and the art of teaching speech to the mute" (Reduction de las
letras y arte para enseñar a hablar a los mudos). This work proposed a method of oral teaching
to the deaf through the use of manual signs in the form of a manual alphabet, to improve the
communication of deaf people.
During the 18th century in Paris, Charles-Michel de L'Épée founded the first public school for
deaf people and incorporated sign language, which would later serve as the basis for French sign
language.
Origin of the American Sign Language
The roots of American Sign Language, or ASL, go back hundred years ago, when the United States
was not even a country. In the coast of Massachusetts there is an island called Martha’s
Vineyard. Several colonists from England who settled there at the end of the 17th century were
deaf, and carried a gene for deafness. For this reason, a large population of deaf people was
settled on the island. They all spoke sing language as an organic process of interacting and
socializing.
All deaf people from Martha's Vineyard started to leave the island in the 1800 to attend the
first American school for the Deaf in Connecticut. The school was created by Thomas Hopkins
Gallaudet, he was a preacher and an American educator, who studied at the school for the deaf in
Paris, where sign was used as a method of instruction.
His school began with a combination of methods from different sign systems: the Martha's
Vineyard sign system and different methods used by deaf students from New England. ASL was born
from the mixture of Parisian Sign Language and from a method of visually representing some
aspects of English. ASL was disclosed and established as the official language of the American
Deaf Community.
Sign language: From exclusion to integration
The process of expansion of ASL hit a roadblock in 1880, when the first International Congress
on Education of the Deaf took place. This event, also known as “The Milan Conference”, was a
conference of deaf educators held in Milan, Italy, in which oral education was declared superior
to manual education. As a result of this conference, the use of sign language was banned at
schools. After this declaration, schools in Europe and in the USA switched to using speech
therapy without sign language, as a method of education for deaf people.
In the mid-20th century, the American linguist and professor William C. Stokoe began to develop
a descriptive method that would allow him to discover the gestural code of linguistic structures
of his deaf students. He recognized the expressive value of sign language and expressed that its
early learning would help the cognitive development of deaf people.
Later, in the 1960s, sign language teaching was implemented again, and it started to be
recognized as any other oral language. And in the 70s, the National Association of the Deaf
conceptualized new approaches to the identity of deaf people, as they were a culturally
differentiated community, with its own language and history.
Throughout the 1990s, deaf people began to fight for their recognition as subjects of law.
Although there have been many achievements, yet there is a long way to go regarding inclusion
and participation of people with diverse physical conditions.