Drawing gestures. Body movement in perceiving and communicating the underwater landscape
Abstract
Underwater archaeology is an interesting case for studying perception and communication in situ, especially considering the characteristics and limitations of the work, related to a submerged field. This medium puts several limitations both on visual perception and on interaction. As a result underwater archaeologists (U.A.) rely mainly on communication on the surface to share relevant knowledge and accomplish their work. Interestingly, they manage to do so always diving in small groups silently, therefore never having all together “the landscape in sight”. This brings several questions about how U.A. are able to reenact the landscape and how they are able to communicate knowledge about it. This paper presents ethnographic work with a team of Chilean U.A. Audio-video data are analyzed with a special focus on meaningful interactions. I show how archaeologists rely, most of the time, on gestures to communicate about the underwater landscape. Challenging mainstream research on gesture, I argue that U.A. do not convey mental, self-contained representations but open movements that are part and parcel of the constant flow of their thoughts. As they perceive the underwater landscape from a limited perspective they draw it gesturally for others, once they have resurfaced. This invites us to understand thinking as corporal movement, and to draw attention to the open-ended, emerging and dynamic side of gestures. I argue that this approach contrasts fully with the well-established representational notion of cognition, which is inadequate to provide and account of how U.A. work.
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Fecha de publicación: | 2009 |
Año de Inicio/Término: | 6 - 9 April |