Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently

Across cultures and languages spontaneous speech is often accompanied by gestures. It is a popular belief that people in Italy gesture more than people in Northern Europe, such as in Sweden. Despite this general assumption few studies empirically investigate cultural differences in gesture frequency...

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Main Authors: Maria Graziano, Marianne Gullberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2024-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2024.1314120/full
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author Maria Graziano
Marianne Gullberg
Marianne Gullberg
author_facet Maria Graziano
Marianne Gullberg
Marianne Gullberg
author_sort Maria Graziano
collection DOAJ
description Across cultures and languages spontaneous speech is often accompanied by gestures. It is a popular belief that people in Italy gesture more than people in Northern Europe, such as in Sweden. Despite this general assumption few studies empirically investigate cultural differences in gesture frequency and gesture function under similar circumstances. This study compares the spoken and gestural behaviours of Italian and Swedish speakers, assumed to represent gesture-rich vs. gesture-sparse cultures. We examine the groups' gestural behaviour for frequency, and in terms of possible differences in rhetorical style probing the distribution of gestural functions (referential vs. pragmatic) across narrative levels (narrative, metanarrative, and paranarrative). The results show that (1) Italians overall do gesture more than Swedes; (2) Italians produce more pragmatic gestures than Swedes who produce more referential gestures; (3) both groups show sensitivity to narrative level: referential gestures mainly occur with narrative clauses, and pragmatic gestures with meta- and paranarrative clauses. However, the overall group preferences for different functions still lead to different styles. These findings indicate that the two groups differ in gesture rate and, more interestingly, in rhetorical styles, one focused on events and actions in speech and gesture (Swedish), the other alternating between events in speech and gesture, and the highlighting of the presentation of new pieces of information in gesture only (Italian). We propose that the findings suggest that the two groups conceptualise narrative production in different ways reflected in two different rhetorical styles revealed by gesture production more than by speech.
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spelling doaj.art-8695ebc86e0c4004a21f743bde87bc792024-03-26T04:19:35ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Communication2297-900X2024-03-01910.3389/fcomm.2024.13141201314120Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differentlyMaria Graziano0Marianne Gullberg1Marianne Gullberg2Lund University Humanities Lab, Lund University, Lund, SwedenLund University Humanities Lab, Lund University, Lund, SwedenCentre for Languages and Literature, Lund University, Lund, SwedenAcross cultures and languages spontaneous speech is often accompanied by gestures. It is a popular belief that people in Italy gesture more than people in Northern Europe, such as in Sweden. Despite this general assumption few studies empirically investigate cultural differences in gesture frequency and gesture function under similar circumstances. This study compares the spoken and gestural behaviours of Italian and Swedish speakers, assumed to represent gesture-rich vs. gesture-sparse cultures. We examine the groups' gestural behaviour for frequency, and in terms of possible differences in rhetorical style probing the distribution of gestural functions (referential vs. pragmatic) across narrative levels (narrative, metanarrative, and paranarrative). The results show that (1) Italians overall do gesture more than Swedes; (2) Italians produce more pragmatic gestures than Swedes who produce more referential gestures; (3) both groups show sensitivity to narrative level: referential gestures mainly occur with narrative clauses, and pragmatic gestures with meta- and paranarrative clauses. However, the overall group preferences for different functions still lead to different styles. These findings indicate that the two groups differ in gesture rate and, more interestingly, in rhetorical styles, one focused on events and actions in speech and gesture (Swedish), the other alternating between events in speech and gesture, and the highlighting of the presentation of new pieces of information in gesture only (Italian). We propose that the findings suggest that the two groups conceptualise narrative production in different ways reflected in two different rhetorical styles revealed by gesture production more than by speech.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2024.1314120/fullgesturespeech productioncrosscultural/linguistic differencesrhetorical stylesbimodal narrative
spellingShingle Maria Graziano
Marianne Gullberg
Marianne Gullberg
Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
Frontiers in Communication
gesture
speech production
crosscultural/linguistic differences
rhetorical styles
bimodal narrative
title Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
title_full Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
title_fullStr Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
title_full_unstemmed Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
title_short Providing evidence for a well-worn stereotype: Italians and Swedes do gesture differently
title_sort providing evidence for a well worn stereotype italians and swedes do gesture differently
topic gesture
speech production
crosscultural/linguistic differences
rhetorical styles
bimodal narrative
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fcomm.2024.1314120/full
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