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Ray Birdwhistell

Ray L. Birdwhistell (September 29, 1918 – October 19, 1994) was an American anthropologist who founded kinesics as a field of inquiry and research.[1] Birdwhistell coined the term kinesics, meaning "facial expression, gestures, posture and gait, and visible arm and body movements".[2] He estimated that "no more than 30 to 35 percent of the social meaning of a conversation or an interaction is carried by the words."[3] Stated more broadly, he argued that "words are not the only containers of social knowledge."[4] He proposed other technical terms, including kineme, and many others less frequently used today.[5] Birdwhistell had at least as much impact on the study of language and social interaction generally as just nonverbal communication because he was interested in the study of communication more broadly than is often recognized.[6] Birdwhistell understood body movements to be culturally patterned rather than universal.[7] His students were required to read widely, sources not only in communication but also anthropology and linguistics.[8] Collaborations with others, including initially Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson, and later, Erving Goffman and Dell Hymes had huge influence on his work. For example, the book he is best known for, Kinesics and Context, "would not have appeared if it had not been envisaged by Erving Goffman" [9] and he explicitly stated "the paramount and sustaining influence upon my work has been that of anthropological linguistics",[10] a tradition most directly represented at the University of Pennsylvania by Hymes.[11]

Ray Birdwhistell
Born(1918-09-29)September 29, 1918
DiedOctober 19, 1994(1994-10-19) (aged 76)
EducationMiami University (BA)
Ohio State University (MA)
University of Chicago (Phd)

Life and work Edit

Birdwhistell was born in Cincinnati on September 29, 1918, and died October 19, 1994.[12] He was raised and went to school in Ohio. He graduated from Fostoria High School in 1936, and was involved in the history club, debate team, journalism, and school plays.[13] Birdwhistell received his BA in sociology in 1940 from Miami University, his MA in anthropology in 1941 from Ohio State University, and his PhD in anthropology in 1951 from the University of Chicago, where he studied with Lloyd Warner and Fred Eggan.[14] From 1944 to 1946 he conducted dissertation fieldwork among the Kutenai Indians of British Columbia[15] during which he first realized that tribal members moved differently depending on whether they were speaking English or Kutenai, which sparked his interest in nonverbal behavior.[16] While completing his dissertation, he taught at the University of Toronto (Ontario), where Erving Goffman was one of his students.[17] From 1944 to 1946 he was lecturer in anthropology at the University of Toronto, working with G. Gordon Brown and Edmund S. Carpenter, who were in the same department.[18]

In 1946 he took a position at the University of Louisville, Kentucky, where he taught for 10 years,[15] and helped in racial integration of the university.[16] While there he established the Interdisciplinary Committee on Culture and Communication,[19] and organized a series of annual seminars on Culture and Communication,[19] resulting in the publication of Explorations in Communication.[20] In addition to Edmund Snow Carpenter, Marshall McLuhan, and Birdwhistell, Lawrence K. Frank, Robert Graves, Dorothy D. Lee, and David Riesman contributed.

Through the 1950s he participated in multiple interdisciplinary collaborations: at the Foreign Service Institute of the United States Department of State, where he first outlined his ideas about the study of nonverbal behavior, working with Edward T. Hall, Henry Lee Smith, George L. Trager, Charles F. Hockett;[21] at the Macy Conferences on Group Processes, with Gregory Bateson, Margaret Mead, and many others;[22] and at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, where he participated in the Natural History of an Interview project with Gregory Bateson, Frieda Fromm-Reichmann, Norman A. McQuown, Henry W. Brosin, and others.[23]

Birdwhistell taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo from 1956 to 1959.[15] In 1959 he was appointed senior research scientist at the Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute, and simultaneously Professor of Research in Anthropology at Temple University[24] in Philadelphia. At EPPI he managed a lab that included a fully equipped 16mm film studio, a resident cinematographer (Jacques van Vlack), an artist who illustrated research findings, and numerous graduate students and visitors who conferred with him and his colleague, psychiatrist Albert E. Scheflen.[25] As a result, Birdwhistell was at the hub of an informal, interdisciplinary network of scholars in anthropology, ethology, linguistics, and psychiatry that "made up in vitality what it lacked in organization and professional identity."[25]

Birdwhistell argued strongly for the use of film as an essential tool in the study of nonverbal behavior as a way to permit "observation and analysis of human social behavior which has hitherto been hidden from comparative analysis".[26] Together with Jacques van Vlack (the filmmaker), he prepared a series of films that were commercially available, although, as with his teaching, they were intended mostly for a technically trained audience.[27]

1. Microcultural Incidents in Ten Zoos, an edited version of a Birdwhistell and van Vlack presentation from an American Anthropological Association convention, compares family interactions while feeding elephants at 10 zoos based in 7 countries (England, France, Italy, India, Japan, Hong Kong, and the United States). Filming was viewed as a second step, following observation to discover recurrent patterns.[28] Birdwhistell himself and Mead often showed this film to their students.[15]

2. TDR- 009, an eighty-minute 16 mm black-and-white sound film of an English pub scene in a middle class London hotel. Birdwhistell and van Vlack observed behavior of listeners in relationship to speakers during the film.[13]

3. Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L. Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic-Kinesic Conference Nov. 4–7, 1964, is simply a documentary record of two lectures Birdwhistell presented to a seminar group assembled for a few days to learn from his research team at EPPI in 1964. Seminar participants were primarily senior research scientists, including linguists, psychiatrists, anthropologists, and psychologists; McQuown and Scheflen, working with Birdwhistell on the Natural History of an Interview project, were among the participants.[29]

Much of the work at EPPI was a continuation of the Natural History of an Interview project, working mostly with Scheflen, while Brosin continued different parts of the same project from the Western Psychiatric Institute & Clinic in Pennsylvania with Adam Kendon, William S. Condon, Kai Erikson, Harvey Sarles, and occasional visits from Bateson. The two teams kept in touch, meeting several days per month between 1960 and 1964 to complete their analysis.[30] A third team, under McQuown's direction at the University of Chicago, included Starkey Duncan Jr., William M. Austin, Raven McDavid Jr., and William Offenkrantz. The Chicago team focused on paralanguage (non-lexical aspects of voice, including intonation), while the Pennsylvania teams attended to kinesics (body motion communication).[30] The final report was completed in 1968, but proved unpublishable due to its length (5 volumes), and the complexity of the transcriptions (taking up 3 of the 5 volumes), so it was circulated via the microfilm series of the University of Chicago.[31]

From 1969 until he retired in 1988, Birdwhistell held the position of professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania,[32] where he worked closely with Dell Hymes and Erving Goffman, brought Gregory Bateson in as a guest speaker,[33] and influenced a new generation of students. It was commonly understood that "no serious doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania who was interested in culture and human conduct" could avoid his courses.[34]

Birdwhistell reputedly came to the attention of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson when he attended a showing of one of their ethnographic films (they were pioneers of the use of film as an ethnographic tool). "Legend has it that Birdwhistell was a younger anthropologist listening to Mead and others comment on a Balinese film when he interjected something like, 'But did you see what the mother did with the baby after she took him out of the bath?' He then brought to their attention a fascinating medley of actions that occurred in a few seconds".[35] Both Mead and Bateson became lifelong supporters and influences. He was also influenced by David Efron's earlier work, the first major study of the influence of culture on gesture [36] prepared under Franz Boas, noted American anthropologist, and Eliot D. Chapple's work on rhythms of dialogue (Chapple is the one who introduced the term interaction to the study of behavior, knocked down a wall at Harvard University so he could establish a one-way screen for observing conversations in the 1930s, and was an early adopter of computer analysis of interaction patterns in the 1960s).[37]

Birdwhistell died of liver cancer on October 19, 1994, at his home in Brigantine, New Jersey.[38]

Influence Edit

Through his involvement in the multidisciplinary projects at the Foreign Service Institute, at the Macy Conferences, and most especially through the Natural History of an Interview project, Birdwhistell helped to establish the study of nonverbal behavior as a central part of communication, as well as influencing critical members of the next generation of nonverbal scholars.[39] Some of the major early books discussing nonverbal communication that owe a substantial debt to Birdwhistell and his research were Sebeok, Hayes and Bateson (1964),[40] Davis (1973),[41] Scheflen (1973),[42] Kendon, Harris and Key (1975),[43] Kendon (1977),[44] Sarles (1977),[45] Wolfgang (1979),[46] and Davis (1982).[47]

Birdwhistell's students include:

  • University of Toronto: Erving Goffman[17]
  • Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute: Paul Byers,[48] Alan Lomax[15]
  • University of Pennsylvania: Lorraine V. Aragon, Maria Catedra, Mary Moore Goodlett, Jane Jorgenson, Wendy Leeds-Hurwitz, Barbara A. Lynch, Christopher Musello, Stuart J. Sigman, Yves Winkin, James Veihdeffer[49]

Goffman became one of the best-known sociologists with an international reputation, and nearly all of his publications became best sellers. Birdwhistell influenced Lomax's development of cantometrics and choreometrics.[15] Byers was quite important in the study of visual communication. Winkin went on to develop the anthropology of communication in Europe. Leeds-Hurwitz and Sigman developed social communication theory, Jorgenson studies family communication, and Musello studies material culture. What is important about this list is the wide variety - those who never studied with Birdwhistell often assume that kinesics was the start and end of his interests, but that was not at all the case.

Birdwhistell pointed out that "human gestures differ from those of other animals in that they are polysemic, that they can be interpreted to have many different meanings depending on the communicative context in which they are produced". And, he "resisted the idea that "body language" could be deciphered in some absolute fashion". He also indicated that "every body movement must be interpreted broadly and in conjunction with every other element in communication"[50]

Birdwhistell's first book Introduction to Kinesics,[51] was published in 1952, but as this was essentially an internal publication for the Department of State, his second book, Kinesics and Context[52] has been cited far more often, and, along with a brief encyclopedia article on kinesics,[53] has had far greater influence on the study of communication behavior. Many of Birdwhistell's publications were short pieces, gathered together to make up Kinesics and Context.

Birdwhistell viewed communication as a continuous, multichannel (today, the more common term is multimodal) process through which and in which social interaction occurs.[12] Although he is best known for inventing kinesics, his influence was much larger: he helped establish the logical underpinnings of language and social interaction research generally,[54] and such approaches as the coordinated management of meaning.[55]

Publications Edit

Books
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1952). Introduction to Kinesics: An Annotation System for Analysis of Body Motion and Gesture. Washington, DC: Department of State, Foreign Service Institute.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1970). Kinesics and Context: Essays on Body Motion Communication. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
Shorter publications (partial)
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1956). Kinesic analysis of filmed behavior of children. In B. Schaffner (Ed.), Group Processes: Transactions of the second conference (pp. 141–144). New York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1959). Contribution of Linguistic-Kinesic Studies for the Understanding of Schizophrenia. In A. Auerback (Ed.), Schizophrenia (pp. 99–123). New York: Ronald Press.
  • Birdwhistell, R, L. (1960). Implications of Recent Developments in Communication Research for Evolutionary Theory. In W. M. Austin (Ed.), Report of the Ninth Annual Round Table Meeting on Linguistics and Language Study (pp. 149–155). Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1961). Paralanguage 25 Years After Sapir. In H. W. Brosin (Ed.), Lectures on Experimental Psychiatry (pp. 43–63). Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1961). "[Review of The First Five Minutes.]". Archives of General Psychiatry. 5: 106–108. doi:10.1001/archpsyc.1961.01710130108016.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1962). Critical Moments in the Psychiatric Interview. In T. T. Tourlentes (Ed.), Research Approaches to a Psychiatric Problem (pp. 179–188). New York: Grune and Stratton.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1968). "Communication". International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. 8: 24–29.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1968). "Kinesics". International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. 8: 379–385.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1968). "[Comments on Edward Hall's Proxemics.]". Current Anthropology. 9 (2–3): 95–96. doi:10.1086/200975. S2CID 147398417.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1971). Kinesics: Inter- and Intra-channel communication research. In J. Kristeva, J. Rey-Debove & D. J. Umiker (Eds.), Essays in semiotics/Essais de semiotique (pp. 527–546). The Hague: Mouton.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1971). Chapter 3: Body Motion, In N. A. McQuown (Ed.), The Natural History of an Interview (pp. 1–93). Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology, Fifteenth Series, Chicago: University of Chicago, Joseph Regenstein Library, Department of Photoduplication.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1971). Appendix 6: Sample Kinesic Transcription. In N. A. McQuown (Ed.), The Natural History of an Interview (pp. 1–29). Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology, Fifteenth Series. Chicago: University of Chicago, Joseph Regenstein Library, Department of Photoduplication.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1974). The language of the body: The natural environment of words. In A. Silverstein (Ed.), Human communication (pp. 203–220). Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1975). Background considerations of the study of the body as a medium of 'expression.' In J. Benthall & T. Polhemus (Eds.), The body as a medium of expression (pp. 34–58). New York: E. P. Dutton.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L. (1977). Some Discussion of Ethnography, Theory, and Method, In J. Brockman (Ed.), About Bateson (pp. 101–141). New York: E. P. Dunon.
  • Birdwhistell, R. L., C. F. Hockett, & N. A. McQuown. (1971). Chapter 6: Transcript, Transcription and Commentary. In N. A. McQuown (Ed,), The Natural History of an Interview [n,p,]. Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology, Fifteenth Series, Chicago: University of Chicago, Joseph Regenstein Library. Department of Photoduplication.

Interviews and lectures

  • Gross, T. (1979) Dr. Birdwhistell's Body Language. Fresh Air with Terry Gross, WHYY, Philadelphia, 29 June 1979. https://freshairarchive.org/segments/dr-birdwhistells-body-language
  • McDermott, R. (1980). Profile: Ray L. Birdwhistell. The Kinesis Report. 2 (3): 1–4, 14–16.
  • Talese, G. (2010.) Dr. Birdwhistell and the Athletes. In Michael Rosenwald (Ed.), The Silent Season of a Hero: The Sports Writing of Gay Talese (pp. 186–200). New York: Walker & Co.
  • Watter, S. B. (2021). Ray L. Birdwhistell, “Lecture at American Museum of Natural History, October 4, 1980." In J. McElvenny & A. Ploder (Eds.), Holisms of Communication: The Early History of Audio-Visual Sequence Analysis (pp. 249–263). Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.5142265.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Danesi, M (2006). Kinesics. Encyclopedia of language & linguistics. 207-213.
  2. ^ Padula, A. (2009). Kinesics. In S. Littlejohn, & K. Foss (Eds.), Encyclopedia of communication theory. (pp. 582-584). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage, doi:10.4135/9781412959384.n217
  3. ^ McDermott, R (1980). "Profile: Ray L. Birdwhistell". The Kinesics Report. 2 (3): 1–16.
  4. ^ In; Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918-1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 249.
  5. ^ Ottenheimer, H.J. (2007). The anthropology of language: an introduction to linguistic anthropology. Kansas : Thomson Wadsworth. p129.
  6. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2010). The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas (pp. 3-60). Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press.
  7. ^ Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918-1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 231. doi:10.1515/semi.1996.112.3-4.231. S2CID 171890064.
  8. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W., & Sigman, S. J. (2010). The Penn tradition. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, p. 237.
  9. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1970). Kinesics and context: Essays in body motion communication. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, p. xiv.
  10. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1970). Kinesics and context: Essays in body motion communication. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, p. 25.
  11. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W., & Sigman, S. J. (2010). The Penn tradition. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, p. 236.
  12. ^ a b Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918-1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 233. doi:10.1515/semi.1996.112.3-4.231. S2CID 171890064.
  13. ^ a b Kirby, E (2006). Ray Lee Birdwhistell. Retrieved October 16, 2007, from Biography Web: Minnesota State University Web site: . Archived from the original on 2007-10-18. Retrieved 2007-10-17.
  14. ^ Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918–1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 233–34. doi:10.1515/semi.1996.112.3-4.231. S2CID 171890064.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Harold, E., & Tobin, S. Ray Birdwhistell. Cultural Equity website. Available from: http://www.culturalequity.org/alanlomax/ce_alanlomax_profile_birdwhistell.php
  16. ^ a b Wallace, A. (October 22, 1994). Ray Birdwhistell: Developed the study of body language. Philadelphia Inquirer. Available from: http://articles.philly.com/1994-10-22/news/25872138_1_body-language-smile-researchers
  17. ^ a b Winkin, Yves; Leeds-Hurwitz, Wendy (2013). Erving Goffman: A critical introduction to media and communication theory. New York: Peter Lang. p. 14.
  18. ^ Department of Anthropology. (n.d.). A brief history of Anthropology at University of Toronto. Retrieved February 26, 2014 from http://anthropology.utoronto.ca/about/history
  19. ^ a b Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918-1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 234. doi:10.1515/semi.1996.112.3-4.231. S2CID 171890064.
  20. ^ Carpenter, E., & McLuhan, M. (Eds.). (1960). Explorations in communication: An anthology. Boston: Beacon Press.
  21. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W (1990). "Notes in the history of intercultural communication: The Foreign Service Institute and the mandate for intercultural training". Quarterly Journal of Speech. 76 (3): 262–281. doi:10.1080/00335639009383919.
  22. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (1994). Crossing disciplinary boundaries: The Macy Foundation Conferences on Cybernetics as a case study in multidisciplinary communication. Cybernetica: Journal of the International Association for Cybernetics, 3/4, 349–369.
  23. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W (1987). "The social history of The Natural History of an Interview: A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication". Research on Language and Social Interaction. 20 (1–4): 1–51. doi:10.1080/08351818709389274.
  24. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (1993). Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute (EPPI). In L. Sfez (Ed.), Dictionnaire critique de la communication, Tome 2 [Critical dictionary of communication, Vol. 2]. Paris, France: Presses Universitaires de France, p. 1702.
  25. ^ a b Davis, M (2001). "Film Projectors as Microscopes: Ray L. Birdwhistell & Microanalysis of Interaction [1955–1975]". Visual Anthropology Review. 17 (2): 39–49. doi:10.1525/var.2001.17.2.39.
  26. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1956). "Kinesic analysis of filmed behavior of children". In B. Schaffner (Ed.), Group Processes: Transactions of the second conference. New York: Josiah Macy, Jr. Foundation, p. 144.
  27. ^ Watter, Seth Barry (2017). "Scrutinizing: Film and the Microanalysis of Behavior". Grey Room. 66: 32–69. doi:10.1162/GREY_a_00211. ISSN 1526-3819. S2CID 57568849.
  28. ^ Bateson, M. C. (1972). "Review of Microcultural incidents in ten zoos". American Anthropologist. 74 (1): 191–192. doi:10.1525/aa.1972.74.1-2.02a01570.
  29. ^ Byers, P (1972). "Review of Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L. Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic-Kinesic Conference Nov. 4–7, 1964". American Anthropologist. 74 (1–2): 193. doi:10.1525/aa.1972.74.1-2.02a01580.
  30. ^ a b Leeds-Hurwitz, W (1987). "The social history of The Natural History of an Interview: A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication". Research on Language and Social Interaction. 20 (1–4): 12. doi:10.1080/08351818709389274.
  31. ^ McQuown, N. A. (Ed.). (1971). The natural history of an interview. Microfilm collections on cultural anthropology. Chicago: University of Chicago, Joseph Regenstein Library, Department of Photoduplication.
  32. ^ Pace, Eric (25 October 1994). "Prof. Ray L. Birdwhistell, 76; Helped Decipher Body Language". The New York Times.
  33. ^ Winkin, Y., & Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2013). Erving Goffman: A critical introduction to media and communication theory. New York: Peter Lang.
  34. ^ Kendon, A.; Sigman, S. J. (1996). "Ray L. Birdwhistell (1918-1994)". Semiotica. 112 (1–2): 249. doi:10.1515/semi.1996.112.3-4.231. S2CID 171890064.
  35. ^ Davis, M (2001). "Film Projectors as Microscopes: Ray L. Birdwhistell & Microanalysis of Interaction [1955–1975]". Visual Anthropology Review. 17 (2): 41–42. doi:10.1525/var.2001.17.2.39.
  36. ^ Efron, D. (1941). Gesture, race, and culture: A tentative study of the spatio-temporal and "linguistic" aspects of the gestural behavior of eastern Jews and southern Italians in New York City, living under similar as well as different environmental conditions. The Hague: Mouton.
  37. ^ Davis, M (2001). "Film Projectors as Microscopes: Ray L. Birdwhistell & Microanalysis of Interaction [1955–1975]". Visual Anthropology Review. 17 (2): 41.
  38. ^ Pace, Eric. "Prof. Ray L. Birdwhistell, 76; Helped Decipher Body Language", The New York Times, October 25, 1994. Accessed May 23, 2018. "Ray L. Birdwhistell, an anthropologist and expert on how people communicate with body motions, died on Wednesday at his home in Brigantine, N.J. He was 76."
  39. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W (1987). "The social history of The Natural History of an Interview: A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication". Research on Language and Social Interaction. 20 (1–4): 36. doi:10.1080/08351818709389274.
  40. ^ Sebeok, T. A., Hayes, A. S., & Bateson, M. C. (Eds.). (1964). Approaches to Semiotics: Transactions of the Indiana University Conference on Paralinguistics and Kinesics. The Hague: Mouton.
  41. ^ Davis, F. (1973). Inside intuition: What we know about nonverbal communication. New York: McGraw Hill.
  42. ^ Scheflen, A. E. (1973). Communicational Structure: Analysis of a Psychotherapy Transaction. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  43. ^ Kendon, A., Harris, R. M., & Key, M. R. (Eds.). (1973). Organization of behavior in face-to-face interaction. The Hague: Mouton.
  44. ^ a
  45. ^ Sarles, Harvey (1977). After Metaphysics: Toward A Grammar Of Interaction And Discourse (reprinted as Language and Human Nature (1985)). Lisee Netherlands: Peter de Ridder Press. ISBN 9789031601349.
  46. ^ Wolfgang, A. (Ed.). (1979). Nonverbal Behavior: Applications and Cultural Implications. New York: Academic Press.
  47. ^ Davis, M. (Ed.). (1982). Interaction Rhythms: Periodicity in Communicative Behavior. New York: Human Sciences Press.
  48. ^ Byers, P (1972). "Review of Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L. Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic-Kinesic Conference Nov. 4–7, 1964". American Anthropologist. 74 (1–2): 192–193. doi:10.1525/aa.1972.74.1-2.02a01580.
  49. ^ All except Catedra from Leeds-Hurwitz, W., & Sigman, S. J. (2010). The Penn tradition. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, pp. 240-1; Catedra, M. (1992). This world, other worlds. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, p. xi.
  50. ^ Barfield, T (1997). The dictionary of anthropology. Illinois: Blackwell Publishing.
  51. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1952). Introduction to Kinesics. Washington, D C : Department of State, Foreign Service Institute.
  52. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1970). Kinesics and Context: Essays on Body Motion Communication. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  53. ^ Birdwhistell, R. L. (1968). "Kinesics". International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences. 8: 379–385.
  54. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2010). The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, p. 47.
  55. ^ Leeds-Hurwitz, W. (2010). The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty. In W. Leeds-Hurwitz (Ed.), The social history of language and social interaction research: People, places, ideas. Cresskill, NJ: Hampton Press, p. 8

birdwhistell, birdwhistell, september, 1918, october, 1994, american, anthropologist, founded, kinesics, field, inquiry, research, birdwhistell, coined, term, kinesics, meaning, facial, expression, gestures, posture, gait, visible, body, movements, estimated, . Ray L Birdwhistell September 29 1918 October 19 1994 was an American anthropologist who founded kinesics as a field of inquiry and research 1 Birdwhistell coined the term kinesics meaning facial expression gestures posture and gait and visible arm and body movements 2 He estimated that no more than 30 to 35 percent of the social meaning of a conversation or an interaction is carried by the words 3 Stated more broadly he argued that words are not the only containers of social knowledge 4 He proposed other technical terms including kineme and many others less frequently used today 5 Birdwhistell had at least as much impact on the study of language and social interaction generally as just nonverbal communication because he was interested in the study of communication more broadly than is often recognized 6 Birdwhistell understood body movements to be culturally patterned rather than universal 7 His students were required to read widely sources not only in communication but also anthropology and linguistics 8 Collaborations with others including initially Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson and later Erving Goffman and Dell Hymes had huge influence on his work For example the book he is best known for Kinesics and Context would not have appeared if it had not been envisaged by Erving Goffman 9 and he explicitly stated the paramount and sustaining influence upon my work has been that of anthropological linguistics 10 a tradition most directly represented at the University of Pennsylvania by Hymes 11 Ray BirdwhistellBorn 1918 09 29 September 29 1918Cincinnati Ohio U S DiedOctober 19 1994 1994 10 19 aged 76 Brigantine New Jersey U S EducationMiami University BA Ohio State University MA University of Chicago Phd Contents 1 Life and work 2 Influence 3 Publications 4 See also 5 ReferencesLife and work EditBirdwhistell was born in Cincinnati on September 29 1918 and died October 19 1994 12 He was raised and went to school in Ohio He graduated from Fostoria High School in 1936 and was involved in the history club debate team journalism and school plays 13 Birdwhistell received his BA in sociology in 1940 from Miami University his MA in anthropology in 1941 from Ohio State University and his PhD in anthropology in 1951 from the University of Chicago where he studied with Lloyd Warner and Fred Eggan 14 From 1944 to 1946 he conducted dissertation fieldwork among the Kutenai Indians of British Columbia 15 during which he first realized that tribal members moved differently depending on whether they were speaking English or Kutenai which sparked his interest in nonverbal behavior 16 While completing his dissertation he taught at the University of Toronto Ontario where Erving Goffman was one of his students 17 From 1944 to 1946 he was lecturer in anthropology at the University of Toronto working with G Gordon Brown and Edmund S Carpenter who were in the same department 18 In 1946 he took a position at the University of Louisville Kentucky where he taught for 10 years 15 and helped in racial integration of the university 16 While there he established the Interdisciplinary Committee on Culture and Communication 19 and organized a series of annual seminars on Culture and Communication 19 resulting in the publication of Explorations in Communication 20 In addition to Edmund Snow Carpenter Marshall McLuhan and Birdwhistell Lawrence K Frank Robert Graves Dorothy D Lee and David Riesman contributed Through the 1950s he participated in multiple interdisciplinary collaborations at the Foreign Service Institute of the United States Department of State where he first outlined his ideas about the study of nonverbal behavior working with Edward T Hall Henry Lee Smith George L Trager Charles F Hockett 21 at the Macy Conferences on Group Processes with Gregory Bateson Margaret Mead and many others 22 and at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences where he participated in the Natural History of an Interview project with Gregory Bateson Frieda Fromm Reichmann Norman A McQuown Henry W Brosin and others 23 Birdwhistell taught at the State University of New York at Buffalo from 1956 to 1959 15 In 1959 he was appointed senior research scientist at the Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute and simultaneously Professor of Research in Anthropology at Temple University 24 in Philadelphia At EPPI he managed a lab that included a fully equipped 16mm film studio a resident cinematographer Jacques van Vlack an artist who illustrated research findings and numerous graduate students and visitors who conferred with him and his colleague psychiatrist Albert E Scheflen 25 As a result Birdwhistell was at the hub of an informal interdisciplinary network of scholars in anthropology ethology linguistics and psychiatry that made up in vitality what it lacked in organization and professional identity 25 Birdwhistell argued strongly for the use of film as an essential tool in the study of nonverbal behavior as a way to permit observation and analysis of human social behavior which has hitherto been hidden from comparative analysis 26 Together with Jacques van Vlack the filmmaker he prepared a series of films that were commercially available although as with his teaching they were intended mostly for a technically trained audience 27 1 Microcultural Incidents in Ten Zoos an edited version of a Birdwhistell and van Vlack presentation from an American Anthropological Association convention compares family interactions while feeding elephants at 10 zoos based in 7 countries England France Italy India Japan Hong Kong and the United States Filming was viewed as a second step following observation to discover recurrent patterns 28 Birdwhistell himself and Mead often showed this film to their students 15 2 TDR 009 an eighty minute 16 mm black and white sound film of an English pub scene in a middle class London hotel Birdwhistell and van Vlack observed behavior of listeners in relationship to speakers during the film 13 3 Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic Kinesic Conference Nov 4 7 1964 is simply a documentary record of two lectures Birdwhistell presented to a seminar group assembled for a few days to learn from his research team at EPPI in 1964 Seminar participants were primarily senior research scientists including linguists psychiatrists anthropologists and psychologists McQuown and Scheflen working with Birdwhistell on the Natural History of an Interview project were among the participants 29 Much of the work at EPPI was a continuation of the Natural History of an Interview project working mostly with Scheflen while Brosin continued different parts of the same project from the Western Psychiatric Institute amp Clinic in Pennsylvania with Adam Kendon William S Condon Kai Erikson Harvey Sarles and occasional visits from Bateson The two teams kept in touch meeting several days per month between 1960 and 1964 to complete their analysis 30 A third team under McQuown s direction at the University of Chicago included Starkey Duncan Jr William M Austin Raven McDavid Jr and William Offenkrantz The Chicago team focused on paralanguage non lexical aspects of voice including intonation while the Pennsylvania teams attended to kinesics body motion communication 30 The final report was completed in 1968 but proved unpublishable due to its length 5 volumes and the complexity of the transcriptions taking up 3 of the 5 volumes so it was circulated via the microfilm series of the University of Chicago 31 From 1969 until he retired in 1988 Birdwhistell held the position of professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania 32 where he worked closely with Dell Hymes and Erving Goffman brought Gregory Bateson in as a guest speaker 33 and influenced a new generation of students It was commonly understood that no serious doctoral student at the University of Pennsylvania who was interested in culture and human conduct could avoid his courses 34 Birdwhistell reputedly came to the attention of Margaret Mead and Gregory Bateson when he attended a showing of one of their ethnographic films they were pioneers of the use of film as an ethnographic tool Legend has it that Birdwhistell was a younger anthropologist listening to Mead and others comment on a Balinese film when he interjected something like But did you see what the mother did with the baby after she took him out of the bath He then brought to their attention a fascinating medley of actions that occurred in a few seconds 35 Both Mead and Bateson became lifelong supporters and influences He was also influenced by David Efron s earlier work the first major study of the influence of culture on gesture 36 prepared under Franz Boas noted American anthropologist and Eliot D Chapple s work on rhythms of dialogue Chapple is the one who introduced the term interaction to the study of behavior knocked down a wall at Harvard University so he could establish a one way screen for observing conversations in the 1930s and was an early adopter of computer analysis of interaction patterns in the 1960s 37 Birdwhistell died of liver cancer on October 19 1994 at his home in Brigantine New Jersey 38 Influence EditThrough his involvement in the multidisciplinary projects at the Foreign Service Institute at the Macy Conferences and most especially through the Natural History of an Interview project Birdwhistell helped to establish the study of nonverbal behavior as a central part of communication as well as influencing critical members of the next generation of nonverbal scholars 39 Some of the major early books discussing nonverbal communication that owe a substantial debt to Birdwhistell and his research were Sebeok Hayes and Bateson 1964 40 Davis 1973 41 Scheflen 1973 42 Kendon Harris and Key 1975 43 Kendon 1977 44 Sarles 1977 45 Wolfgang 1979 46 and Davis 1982 47 Birdwhistell s students include University of Toronto Erving Goffman 17 Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute Paul Byers 48 Alan Lomax 15 University of Pennsylvania Lorraine V Aragon Maria Catedra Mary Moore Goodlett Jane Jorgenson Wendy Leeds Hurwitz Barbara A Lynch Christopher Musello Stuart J Sigman Yves Winkin James Veihdeffer 49 Goffman became one of the best known sociologists with an international reputation and nearly all of his publications became best sellers Birdwhistell influenced Lomax s development of cantometrics and choreometrics 15 Byers was quite important in the study of visual communication Winkin went on to develop the anthropology of communication in Europe Leeds Hurwitz and Sigman developed social communication theory Jorgenson studies family communication and Musello studies material culture What is important about this list is the wide variety those who never studied with Birdwhistell often assume that kinesics was the start and end of his interests but that was not at all the case Birdwhistell pointed out that human gestures differ from those of other animals in that they are polysemic that they can be interpreted to have many different meanings depending on the communicative context in which they are produced And he resisted the idea that body language could be deciphered in some absolute fashion He also indicated that every body movement must be interpreted broadly and in conjunction with every other element in communication 50 Birdwhistell s first book Introduction to Kinesics 51 was published in 1952 but as this was essentially an internal publication for the Department of State his second book Kinesics and Context 52 has been cited far more often and along with a brief encyclopedia article on kinesics 53 has had far greater influence on the study of communication behavior Many of Birdwhistell s publications were short pieces gathered together to make up Kinesics and Context Birdwhistell viewed communication as a continuous multichannel today the more common term is multimodal process through which and in which social interaction occurs 12 Although he is best known for inventing kinesics his influence was much larger he helped establish the logical underpinnings of language and social interaction research generally 54 and such approaches as the coordinated management of meaning 55 Publications EditBooksBirdwhistell R L 1952 Introduction to Kinesics An Annotation System for Analysis of Body Motion and Gesture Washington DC Department of State Foreign Service Institute Birdwhistell R L 1970 Kinesics and Context Essays on Body Motion Communication Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Shorter publications partial Birdwhistell R L 1956 Kinesic analysis of filmed behavior of children In B Schaffner Ed Group Processes Transactions of the second conference pp 141 144 New York Josiah Macy Jr Foundation Birdwhistell R L 1959 Contribution of Linguistic Kinesic Studies for the Understanding of Schizophrenia In A Auerback Ed Schizophrenia pp 99 123 New York Ronald Press Birdwhistell R L 1960 Implications of Recent Developments in Communication Research for Evolutionary Theory In W M Austin Ed Report of the Ninth Annual Round Table Meeting on Linguistics and Language Study pp 149 155 Washington D C Georgetown University Press Birdwhistell R L 1961 Paralanguage 25 Years After Sapir In H W Brosin Ed Lectures on Experimental Psychiatry pp 43 63 Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press Birdwhistell R L 1961 Review of The First Five Minutes Archives of General Psychiatry 5 106 108 doi 10 1001 archpsyc 1961 01710130108016 Birdwhistell R L 1962 Critical Moments in the Psychiatric Interview In T T Tourlentes Ed Research Approaches to a Psychiatric Problem pp 179 188 New York Grune and Stratton Birdwhistell R L 1968 Communication International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 8 24 29 Birdwhistell R L 1968 Kinesics International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 8 379 385 Birdwhistell R L 1968 Comments on Edward Hall s Proxemics Current Anthropology 9 2 3 95 96 doi 10 1086 200975 S2CID 147398417 Birdwhistell R L 1971 Kinesics Inter and Intra channel communication research In J Kristeva J Rey Debove amp D J Umiker Eds Essays in semiotics Essais de semiotique pp 527 546 The Hague Mouton Birdwhistell R L 1971 Chapter 3 Body Motion In N A McQuown Ed The Natural History of an Interview pp 1 93 Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology Fifteenth Series Chicago University of Chicago Joseph Regenstein Library Department of Photoduplication Birdwhistell R L 1971 Appendix 6 Sample Kinesic Transcription In N A McQuown Ed The Natural History of an Interview pp 1 29 Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology Fifteenth Series Chicago University of Chicago Joseph Regenstein Library Department of Photoduplication Birdwhistell R L 1974 The language of the body The natural environment of words In A Silverstein Ed Human communication pp 203 220 Hillsdale NJ Lawrence Erlbaum Birdwhistell R L 1975 Background considerations of the study of the body as a medium of expression In J Benthall amp T Polhemus Eds The body as a medium of expression pp 34 58 New York E P Dutton Birdwhistell R L 1977 Some Discussion of Ethnography Theory and Method In J Brockman Ed About Bateson pp 101 141 New York E P Dunon Birdwhistell R L C F Hockett amp N A McQuown 1971 Chapter 6 Transcript Transcription and Commentary In N A McQuown Ed The Natural History of an Interview n p Microfilm Collection of Manuscripts on Cultural Anthropology Fifteenth Series Chicago University of Chicago Joseph Regenstein Library Department of Photoduplication Interviews and lectures Gross T 1979 Dr Birdwhistell s Body Language Fresh Air with Terry Gross WHYY Philadelphia 29 June 1979 https freshairarchive org segments dr birdwhistells body language McDermott R 1980 Profile Ray L Birdwhistell The Kinesis Report 2 3 1 4 14 16 Talese G 2010 Dr Birdwhistell and the Athletes In Michael Rosenwald Ed The Silent Season of a Hero The Sports Writing of Gay Talese pp 186 200 New York Walker amp Co Watter S B 2021 Ray L Birdwhistell Lecture at American Museum of Natural History October 4 1980 In J McElvenny amp A Ploder Eds Holisms of Communication The Early History of Audio Visual Sequence Analysis pp 249 263 Berlin Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 5142265 See also EditMacy Conferences KinesicsReferences Edit Danesi M 2006 Kinesics Encyclopedia of language amp linguistics 207 213 Padula A 2009 Kinesics In S Littlejohn amp K Foss Eds Encyclopedia of communication theory pp 582 584 Thousand Oaks CA Sage doi 10 4135 9781412959384 n217 McDermott R 1980 Profile Ray L Birdwhistell The Kinesics Report 2 3 1 16 In Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 249 Ottenheimer H J 2007 The anthropology of language an introduction to linguistic anthropology Kansas Thomson Wadsworth p129 Leeds Hurwitz W 2010 The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas pp 3 60 Cresskill NJ Hampton Press Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 231 doi 10 1515 semi 1996 112 3 4 231 S2CID 171890064 Leeds Hurwitz W amp Sigman S J 2010 The Penn tradition In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas Cresskill NJ Hampton Press p 237 Birdwhistell R L 1970 Kinesics and context Essays in body motion communication Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p xiv Birdwhistell R L 1970 Kinesics and context Essays in body motion communication Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 25 Leeds Hurwitz W amp Sigman S J 2010 The Penn tradition In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas Cresskill NJ Hampton Press p 236 a b Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 233 doi 10 1515 semi 1996 112 3 4 231 S2CID 171890064 a b Kirby E 2006 Ray Lee Birdwhistell Retrieved October 16 2007 from Biography Web Minnesota State University Web site Ray L Birdwhistell Archived from the original on 2007 10 18 Retrieved 2007 10 17 Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 233 34 doi 10 1515 semi 1996 112 3 4 231 S2CID 171890064 a b c d e f Harold E amp Tobin S Ray Birdwhistell Cultural Equity website Available from http www culturalequity org alanlomax ce alanlomax profile birdwhistell php a b Wallace A October 22 1994 Ray Birdwhistell Developed the study of body language Philadelphia Inquirer Available from http articles philly com 1994 10 22 news 25872138 1 body language smile researchers a b Winkin Yves Leeds Hurwitz Wendy 2013 Erving Goffman A critical introduction to media and communication theory New York Peter Lang p 14 Department of Anthropology n d A brief history of Anthropology at University of Toronto Retrieved February 26 2014 from http anthropology utoronto ca about history a b Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 234 doi 10 1515 semi 1996 112 3 4 231 S2CID 171890064 Carpenter E amp McLuhan M Eds 1960 Explorations in communication An anthology Boston Beacon Press Leeds Hurwitz W 1990 Notes in the history of intercultural communication The Foreign Service Institute and the mandate for intercultural training Quarterly Journal of Speech 76 3 262 281 doi 10 1080 00335639009383919 Leeds Hurwitz W 1994 Crossing disciplinary boundaries The Macy Foundation Conferences on Cybernetics as a case study in multidisciplinary communication Cybernetica Journal of the International Association for Cybernetics 3 4 349 369 Leeds Hurwitz W 1987 The social history of The Natural History of an Interview A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication Research on Language and Social Interaction 20 1 4 1 51 doi 10 1080 08351818709389274 Leeds Hurwitz W 1993 Eastern Pennsylvania Psychiatric Institute EPPI In L Sfez Ed Dictionnaire critique de la communication Tome 2 Critical dictionary of communication Vol 2 Paris France Presses Universitaires de France p 1702 a b Davis M 2001 Film Projectors as Microscopes Ray L Birdwhistell amp Microanalysis of Interaction 1955 1975 Visual Anthropology Review 17 2 39 49 doi 10 1525 var 2001 17 2 39 Birdwhistell R L 1956 Kinesic analysis of filmed behavior of children In B Schaffner Ed Group Processes Transactions of the second conference New York Josiah Macy Jr Foundation p 144 Watter Seth Barry 2017 Scrutinizing Film and the Microanalysis of Behavior Grey Room 66 32 69 doi 10 1162 GREY a 00211 ISSN 1526 3819 S2CID 57568849 Bateson M C 1972 Review of Microcultural incidents in ten zoos American Anthropologist 74 1 191 192 doi 10 1525 aa 1972 74 1 2 02a01570 Byers P 1972 Review of Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic Kinesic Conference Nov 4 7 1964 American Anthropologist 74 1 2 193 doi 10 1525 aa 1972 74 1 2 02a01580 a b Leeds Hurwitz W 1987 The social history of The Natural History of an Interview A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication Research on Language and Social Interaction 20 1 4 12 doi 10 1080 08351818709389274 McQuown N A Ed 1971 The natural history of an interview Microfilm collections on cultural anthropology Chicago University of Chicago Joseph Regenstein Library Department of Photoduplication Pace Eric 25 October 1994 Prof Ray L Birdwhistell 76 Helped Decipher Body Language The New York Times Winkin Y amp Leeds Hurwitz W 2013 Erving Goffman A critical introduction to media and communication theory New York Peter Lang Kendon A Sigman S J 1996 Ray L Birdwhistell 1918 1994 Semiotica 112 1 2 249 doi 10 1515 semi 1996 112 3 4 231 S2CID 171890064 Davis M 2001 Film Projectors as Microscopes Ray L Birdwhistell amp Microanalysis of Interaction 1955 1975 Visual Anthropology Review 17 2 41 42 doi 10 1525 var 2001 17 2 39 Efron D 1941 Gesture race and culture A tentative study of the spatio temporal and linguistic aspects of the gestural behavior of eastern Jews and southern Italians in New York City living under similar as well as different environmental conditions The Hague Mouton Davis M 2001 Film Projectors as Microscopes Ray L Birdwhistell amp Microanalysis of Interaction 1955 1975 Visual Anthropology Review 17 2 41 Pace Eric Prof Ray L Birdwhistell 76 Helped Decipher Body Language The New York Times October 25 1994 Accessed May 23 2018 Ray L Birdwhistell an anthropologist and expert on how people communicate with body motions died on Wednesday at his home in Brigantine N J He was 76 Leeds Hurwitz W 1987 The social history of The Natural History of an Interview A multidisciplinary investigation of social communication Research on Language and Social Interaction 20 1 4 36 doi 10 1080 08351818709389274 Sebeok T A Hayes A S amp Bateson M C Eds 1964 Approaches to Semiotics Transactions of the Indiana University Conference on Paralinguistics and Kinesics The Hague Mouton Davis F 1973 Inside intuition What we know about nonverbal communication New York McGraw Hill Scheflen A E 1973 Communicational Structure Analysis of a Psychotherapy Transaction Bloomington Indiana University Press Kendon A Harris R M amp Key M R Eds 1973 Organization of behavior in face to face interaction The Hague Mouton a Sarles Harvey 1977 After Metaphysics Toward A Grammar Of Interaction And Discourse reprinted as Language and Human Nature 1985 Lisee Netherlands Peter de Ridder Press ISBN 9789031601349 Wolfgang A Ed 1979 Nonverbal Behavior Applications and Cultural Implications New York Academic Press Davis M Ed 1982 Interaction Rhythms Periodicity in Communicative Behavior New York Human Sciences Press Byers P 1972 Review of Lecture on Kinesics by Ray L Birdwhistell at the Second Linguistic Kinesic Conference Nov 4 7 1964 American Anthropologist 74 1 2 192 193 doi 10 1525 aa 1972 74 1 2 02a01580 All except Catedra from Leeds Hurwitz W amp Sigman S J 2010 The Penn tradition In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas Cresskill NJ Hampton Press pp 240 1 Catedra M 1992 This world other worlds Chicago University of Chicago Press p xi Barfield T 1997 The dictionary of anthropology Illinois Blackwell Publishing Birdwhistell R L 1952 Introduction to Kinesics Washington D C Department of State Foreign Service Institute Birdwhistell R L 1970 Kinesics and Context Essays on Body Motion Communication Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press Birdwhistell R L 1968 Kinesics International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences 8 379 385 Leeds Hurwitz W 2010 The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas Cresskill NJ Hampton Press p 47 Leeds Hurwitz W 2010 The emergence of language and social interaction research as a specialty In W Leeds Hurwitz Ed The social history of language and social interaction research People places ideas Cresskill NJ Hampton Press p 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ray Birdwhistell amp oldid 1177468168, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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