Chapter 3
Narrative and pantomime at the origin of language
The present chapter proposes a pantomimic account of language origin resting on a persuasive/narrative conception of
human communication. Relying on the twofold constraint of the cognitive architectures responsible for the processing of the
mental content and of the material resources for expressing that content, I suggest that pantomime represented an ideal means
to convey proto-narrative representations in the absence of verbal language. Although representing an early effective form of
protolanguage because of its narrative persuasive power, pantomime shows its limits in sustaining a more sophisticated type of
communication characterizing face-to-face conversation. In this context, the need to engage in an arguing-counterarguing
dialectics might have created new selective pressures towards complex syntactic structures able to support argumentative forms
of persuasion.
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Mental stories
- 2.1Narrative as a social practice
- 2.2The language first hypothesis
- 3.The narrative brain and the proto-narrative representation of experience
- 4.Splendor and misery of the narrative brain
- 5.The proto-stories of bodily mimesis
- 6.From gesture to speech (from stories to conversation)
- 7.Conclusions
-
Notes
-
References
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