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Kata Kolok (literally "deaf talk"), also known as Benkala Sign Language and Balinese Sign Language, is a village sign language which is indigenous to two neighbouring villages in northern Bali, Indonesia. The main village, Bengkala, has had high incidences of deafness for over seven generations. Notwithstanding the biological time depth of the recessive mutation that causes deafness, the first substantial cohort of deaf signers did not occur until five generations ago, and this event marks the emergence of Kata Kolok. The sign language has been acquired by at least five generations of deaf, native signers and features in all aspects of village life, including political, professional, educational, and religious settings.

Bengkala Sign Language
Kata Kolok
Native toBali, Indonesia
RegionOne village in the northern part of the island
Native speakers
40 deaf signers (2007)[1]
1,200 hearing signers (2011)[1]
Language family
language isolate
Language codes
ISO 639-3bqy
Glottologbeng1239
ELPKata Kolok

Kata Kolok is linguistically unrelated to spoken Balinese or other sign languages. It lacks certain common contact sign phenomena that often arise when a sign language and an oral language are in close contact, such as fingerspelling and mouthing. It differs from other known sign languages in a number of respects: signers make extensive use of cardinal directions and real-world locations to organize the signing space, and they do not use a metaphorical "time line" for time reference. Additionally, Kata Kolok is the only known sign language which predominantly deploys an absolute frame of reference rather than an intrinsic or relative frame.

The Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics (MPI) and the International Institute for Sign Languages and Deaf Studies have archived over 100 hours of Kata Kolok video data. The metadata of this corpus are accessible online (see www.mpi.nl).

Deaf people in the village express themselves using special cultural forms such as deaf dance and martial arts and occupy special ritual and social roles, including digging graves and maintaining water pipes. Deaf and hearing villagers alike share a belief in a deaf god.


Bibliography



References


  1. Bengkala Sign Language at Ethnologue (18th ed., 2015) (subscription required)

На других языках


- [en] Kata Kolok

[fr] Langue des signes de Bengkala

La Langue des signes de Bengkala (ou Kata Kolok) est une langue des signes pratiquée dans deux villages au nord de Bali en Indonésie.

[ru] Балийский жестовый язык

Балийский жестовый язык (индон. Kata Kolok, буквально «глухая речь», также Balinese Sign Language, Bengkala Sign Language, Benkala Sign Language) — находящийся под угрозой исчезновения деревенский жестовый язык, который распространён среди глухих, проживающих в деревне Бенгкала округа Булеленг острова Бали на Малых Зондских островах в Индонезии.



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