“To catch”, Experience Representation in the Narratives of Children with Intellectual Disabilities
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7764/onomazein.44.03Keywords:
multimodality, communication, intellectual disability, ideational metafunction, gesturesAbstract
There is limited research that deepens into the characteristics of communicative resources
and meanings exchanged in the communication of children with intellectual disabilities. The
present study is positioned in a social semiotic paradigm to explore the semantic functions
of nonverbal resources in the representation of experience in the narratives of children with
intellectual disabilities. From a multimodal approach to communication we recognize the
semiotic value of all resources for the construction of meanings. Based on an audiovisual
corpus of narratives of four children with intellectual disabilities, we develop a multimodal
discourse analysis of a recounting task with visual support of a picture book, focused on ideational
metafunction. The results show that narrators construct the narrative knot “catch”
through semiotic ensembles that include different types of deictic gestures on the images
of the picture book and pantomime. These semiotic ensembles allow the intersemiotic construction
of both actions and the participants Agent and Goal, as well as reactions: Reactor
and Phenomenon. The discourse analysis of this research as well as the preliminary data open
the doors to new questions about the communication of this singular group of narrators